Methods for making and using molecular switches involving circular permutation

ABSTRACT

The invention provides molecular switches which couple external signals to functionality, and combinatorial methods of making and using the same involving circular permutation of nucleic acid and amino acid sequences. The switches according to the invention can be used, for example, to regulate gene transcription, target drug delivery to specific cells, transport drugs intracellularly, control drug release, provide conditionally active proteins, perform metabolic engineering, and modulate cell signaling pathways. Libraries comprising the switches, expression vectors and host cells for expressing the switches are also provided.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a divisional application of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/588,114, filed Aug. 1, 2007, allowed, which is the U.S. national stage of PCT/US2005/002633, filed Jan. 28, 2005, which claims priority of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. Nos. 60/539,774, 60/557,152, 60/607,684, and 60/628,997, filed Jan. 28, 2004, Mar. 26, 2004, Sep. 7, 2004, and Nov. 18, 2004, respectively, the entire disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.

STATEMENT AS TO FEDERALLY SUPPORTED RESEARCH

The present invention was made with United States government support under grant number R01 GM066972-01A1 from the National Institutes of Health. Accordingly, the United States government has certain rights in the invention.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The invention relates to fusion molecules which function as molecular switches and to methods for making and using the same. More particularly, combinatorial methods involving circular permutation of DNA are used.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

A hallmark of biological systems is the high degree of interactions among their constituent components. Cells can be described as complex circuits consisting of a network of interacting molecules. Key component of these networks are proteins that serve to couple cellular functions. A protein that couples functions can be described as a “molecular switch.” In most general terms, a molecular switch recognizes an effector (input) signal (e.g., ligand concentration, pH, covalent modification) with resultant modification of its output signal (e.g., enzymatic activity, ligand affinity, oligomeric state). Examples of natural molecular switches include allosteric enzymes that couple concentration of effector molecules with level of enzymatic activity, and ligand-dependent transcription factors that couple ligand concentration to output level of gene expression. Molecular switches can be “ON/OFF” in nature or can exhibit a graded response to a signal.

There is recognition that there is great potential to design fusion proteins that act as molecular switches to modulate or report on biological functions for a variety of applications including biosensors (Siegel and Isacoff 1997; Baird, Zachariasiii et al. 1999; Doi and Yanagawa 1999; de Lorimier, Smith et al. 2002; Fehr, Frommer et al. 2002) modulators of gene transcription and cell signaling pathways (Rivera 1998; Guo, Zhou et al. 2000; Picard 2000), and novel biomaterials (Stayton, Shimoboji et al. 1995). Despite its great potential, however, molecular switch technology has not been extensively exploited, in part due to technical challenges in engineering effective molecular switches. In general, existing approaches to creating protein molecular switches include: control of oligomerization or proximity using chemical inducers of dimerization (CID); chemical rescue; fusion of the target protein to a steroid binding domain (SBD); coupling of proteins to nonbiological materials such as ‘smart’ polymers (Stayton, Shimoboji et al. 1995; Ding, Fong et al. 2001; Kyriakides, Cheung et al. 2002) or metal nanocrystals (Hamad-Schifferli, Schwartz et al. 2002); and domain insertion.

The approach of control using a chemical inducer of dimerization (CID) utilizes a synthetic ligand as the CID that controls the oligomeric or proximity of two proteins (Rivera 1998). CIDs are small molecules that have two binding surfaces that facilitate the dimerization of domains fused to target proteins. This approach was first developed using the immunosupressant FK506 to facilitate dimerization of target proteins fused to the FK506-binding protein, FKBP12 (Spencer, Wandless et al. 1993). Several variations on this system have since appeared as well as a system using the antibiotic coumermycin to dimerize proteins fused to B subunit of bacterial DNA gyrase (GyrB) (Farrar, Olson et al. 2000). CIDs have been used to initiate signaling pathways by dimerizing receptors on the cell surface, to translocate cytosolic proteins to the plasma membrane, to import and export proteins from the nucleus, to induce apoptosis and to regulate gene transcription (Bishop, Buzko et al. 2000; Farrar, Olson et al. 2000). However, CIDs have only been applied to those functions that require changes in the oligomeric state or proximity of the two proteins. As described in the literature however, this approach cannot be readily applied to a single protein.

Chemical rescue has recently been applied as a strategy for control, in the case of dimerization (Guo, Zhou et al. 2000). Chemical rescue aims to restore activity to a mutant, catalytically defective enzyme by the introduction of a small molecule that has the requisite properties of the mutated residues. Since first described for subtilisin (Carter and Wells 1987), chemical rescue has been demonstrated for a number of different mutated protein-small molecule pairs (Williams, Wang et al. 2000). The vast majority of these rescues required >5 mM concentrations to show detectable rescue, and the maximum fold improvement in activity of the mutant was generally less than 100-fold and required >100 mM concentrations of the rescuing molecule.

For the strategy of fusion to a steroid binding domain, the protein to be controlled is fused end-to-end to a SBD (Picard 2000). In the absence of the steroid that binds to the SBD, it is believed that a Hsp90-SBD complex sterically interferes with the activity of the protein fused to the SBD. The disassembly of the complex upon steroid binding restores activity to the protein. This strategy has been successfully applied principally to transcription factors and kinases (Picard 2000). Artificial transcription factors (such as GeneSwitch™) have been developed using this strategy and have promise for tissue-specific gene expression in transgenic animals and human gene therapy (Burcin, B W et al. 1998; Burcin, Schiedner et al. 1999).

For approaches involving coupling to non-biological materials, the protein to be controlled is coupled to a non-biological material that responds to an external signal and thereby affects the protein coupled to it. ‘Smart’ polymers that change their conformation upon a change in pH or temperature have been conjugated to proteins near ligand binding sites, to create switches that sterically block access to the binding site at, for example, higher temperatures, but not at lower temperatures (Stayton, Shimoboji et al. 1995; Ding, Fong et al. 2001). Inductive coupling of a magnetic field to metal nanocrystals attached to biomolecules resulting in an increase in local temperature thereby inducing denaturation, has so far only been applied to DNA (Hamad-Schifferli, Schwartz et al. 2002).

Relatively few studies have attempted to create a molecular switch using the approach of insertional fusion, in which one gene is inserted into another gene. Insertions result in a continuous domain being split into a discontinuous domain. The first example of successful insertion of one protein into another was of alkaline phosphatase (AP) into the E. coli outer membrane protein MalF, constructed as a tool for studying membrane topology (Ehrmann, Boyd et al. 1990). High levels of alkaline phosphatase activity were obtained in the fusions despite the fact that alkaline phosphatase requires dimerization for activity. Other examples of proteins that have been inserted into other proteins include green fluorescent protein GFP) (Siegel and Isacoff 1997; Biondi, Baehler et al. 1998; Kratz, Bottcher et al. 1999; Siegel and Isacoff 2000), TEM1 β-lactamase (Betton, Jacob et al. 1997; Doi and Yanagawa 1999; Collinet, Herve et al. 2000), thioredoxin (Lu, Murray et al. 1995), dihydrofolate reductase (Collinet, Herve et al. 2000), FKBP12 (Tucker and Fields 2001), estrogen receptor-α(Tucker and Fields 2001) and β-xylanase (Aÿ Götz et al. 1998).

In studies of insertions into GFP, molecular sensors were created by inserting β-lactamase into GFP by random mutagenesis, to create a protein whose fluorescence increased 60% upon binding of the β-lactamase inhibitory protein. Insertions of calmodulin (a Ca²⁺ binding protein) into GFP resulted in a fusion whose fluorescence changed up to 40% upon increases in Ca²⁺ concentration (Baird, Zacharias et al. 1999). In a related strategy, the gene for a circularly permuted GFP was sandwiched between the gene for calmodulin and its target peptide M13 to create a series of sensors whose fluorescence intensity increased, decreased or showed an excitation wavelength change upon binding Ca2⁺ (Nagai, Sawano et al. 2001).

With the exception of the domain insertion strategy, all of the above-described approaches to engineering a molecular switch are limited in the sorts of signals that can be employed or the types of proteins that can be controlled. CIDs have only been applied to those functions that require changes in the oligomeric state or proximity of the two proteins and thus cannot be used to control a single protein. The chemical rescue approach is limited by the inability to apply the method to any desired signal and by the lack of sensitivity (high concentrations of the signal are required for a small change in activity). The SBD strategy appears to be limited as a general method for controlling any protein due to the apparent requirement for end-to-end fusion.

The domain insertion strategy is a promising and generally applicable approach to engineering a molecular switch. However existing domain insertion strategies are limited by the number of possible insertional fusions between the two domains. Generally, methods for generating molecular switches have not provided a systematic way to generate very large numbers of fusions of different geometries that would be ideal for generating and optimizing functional coupling of protein domains in molecular switches.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The invention provides improved molecular switches, for example with switching activity greater than previously demonstrated, or with altered ligand recognition and binding, and methods of making these molecules involving circular permutationof nucleic acid or amino acid sequences. Molecular switches have been created by recombining nonhomologous genes in vitro and subjecting the genes to evolutionary pressure using combinatorial techniques. The approach may be envisioned as “rolling” two proteins across each other's surfaces and fusing them at points where their surfaces meet. The approach allows for recombination and testing of maximal numbers of geometric configurations between the two domains. Libraries comprising vast numbers of such fused molecules are provided from which molecular switches with optimal characteristics can be isolated.

Preferred switches are fusion molecules comprising an insertion sequence and an acceptor sequence for receiving the insertion sequence, wherein the state of the insertion sequence is coupled to the state of the acceptor sequence. For example, the activity of the insertion sequence can be coupled to the activity/state of the acceptor sequence.

The “state” of a molecule can comprise its ability or latent ability to emit or absorb light, its ability or latent ability to change conformation, its ability or latent ability to bind to a ligand, to catalyze a substrate, transfer electrons, and the like. Preferably, molecular switches according to the invention are multistable, i.e., able to switch between at least two states. In one aspect, the fusion molecule is bistable, i.e., a state is either “ON” or “OFF,” for example, able to emit light or not, able to bind or not, able to catalyze or not, able to transfer electrons or not, and so forth. In another aspect, the fusion molecule is able to switch between more than two states. For example, in response to a particular threshold state exhibited by an insertion sequence or acceptor sequence, the respective other sequence of the fusion may exhibit a range of states (e.g., a range of binding activity, a range of enzyme catalysis, etc.). Thus, rather than switching from “ON” or “OFF,” the fusion molecule can exhibit a graded response to a stimulus. More generally, a molecular switch is one which generates a measurable change in state in response to a signal.

Accordingly, and in one aspect, the invention provides a method for assembling a fusion molecule, comprising: generating an insertion sequence by circular permutation; and inserting the insertion sequence into an acceptor sequence.

In one variation of the method, the insertion sequence is inserted at a selected site in the acceptor sequence. In another variation, the insertion sequence is inserted at a random site in the acceptor sequence.

Another aspect of the invention is a method for assembling a modulatable fusion molecule, comprising: generating an insertion sequence by circular permutation; inserting the insertion sequence into an acceptor sequence, wherein the insertion sequence and the acceptor sequence each comprise a state; and selecting a fusion molecule, wherein the state of the insertion sequence and the state of the acceptor sequence are coupled. As in the above method, variations are provided wherein the insertion sequence is inserted at a selected site in the acceptor sequence or at a random site in the acceptor sequence.

In some embodiments of the method, the state of the insertion sequence generated by circular permutation is modulated. The state of the insertion sequence can be modulated in response to a change in the state of the acceptor sequence, or modulated in response to a change in the state of the insertion sequence. The fusion molecule can further comprise a new state.

In yet another aspect is provided a method for assembling a multistable fusion molecule which can switch between at least an active state and a less active state, comprising: generating an insertion sequence by circular permutation; inserting the insertion sequence into an acceptor sequence, wherein either the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence comprises a state; and wherein the respective other sequence is responsive to a signal; and selecting a fusion molecule, wherein the state is coupled to the signal, such that the fusion molecule switches state in response to the signal.

In some versions of the methods of making fusion molecules the insertion sequence and acceptor sequence can comprise nucleic acids. In these methods, insertion includes obtaining a first nucleic acid fragment encoding an insertion polypeptide and a second nucleic acid fragment encoding an acceptor polypeptide and inserting the first nucleic acid fragment into the second nucleic acid fragment. In some aspects this method is used to provide libraries of fusion nucleic acids encoding fusion polypeptides comprising insertion polypeptides inserted into acceptor polypeptide sequences. Preferred fusion polypeptides are selected from these libraries in which the states of the insertion and acceptor polypeptides are coupled.

The invention also provides a method for modulating a cellular activity, comprising: providing a fusion molecule generated according to the above-described methods involving circular permutation of DNA, wherein a change in state of at least the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence modulates a cellular activity, and wherein the change in state which modulates the cellular activity is coupled to a change in state of the respective other portion of the fusion molecule. Changing the state of the respective other portion of the fusion molecule thereby modulates the cellular activity.

Yet a further aspect is a method for delivering a bio-effective molecule to a cell, comprising: providing to the cell a fusion molecule associated with a bio-effective molecule generated according to any of the above methods, the fusion molecule comprising an insertion sequence and an acceptor sequence, wherein either the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence binds to a cellular marker of a pathological condition and wherein upon binding to the marker, the fusion molecule dissociates from the bio-effective molecule, thereby delivering the molecule to the cell.

Further provided is a method for delivering a bio-effective molecule intracellularly, comprising: providing to a cell a fusion molecule associated with a bio-effective molecule generated according to any of the above-described methods involving circular permutation, the fusion molecule comprising an insertion sequence and an acceptor sequence, wherein either the insertion sequence or acceptor sequence comprises a transport sequence for transporting the fusion molecule intracellularly, and wherein release of the bio-effective molecule from the fusion molecule is coupled to transport of the fusion molecule intracellularly.

Another aspect of the invention is a method for modulating a molecular pathway in a cell, comprising: providing to a cell a fusion molecule generated according to any of the above-described methods, the fusion molecule comprising an insertion sequence and an acceptor sequence, wherein the activities of the insertion sequence and acceptor sequence are coupled, and responsive to a signal, and wherein the activity of either the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence modulates the activity or expression of a molecular pathway molecule in the cell; and exposing the fusion molecule to the signal.

Also provided is a method for controlling the activity of a nucleic acid regulatory sequence, comprising: providing a fusion molecule generated by circular permutation according to any of the above methods, the fusion molecule comprising an insertion sequence and an acceptor sequence, wherein either the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence responds to a signal, and wherein the respective other sequence of the fusion molecule binds to the nucleic acid regulatory sequence when the signal is responded to; and exposing the fusion molecule to the signal.

The invention further provides in another aspect a sensor molecule for detecting a target analyte. The sensor molecule comprises an insertion sequence and an acceptor sequence generated according to any of the above methods. Either the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence binds the analyte, and binding of the analyte is coupled to production of a signal from the sensor molecule.

In yet another aspect, the invention provides a fusion molecule comprising: an insertion sequence and an acceptor sequence, generated according to the above-described methods. In one embodiment, either the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence transports the fusion molecule intracellularly, wherein intracellular transport of the fusion molecule is coupled to binding of the fusion molecule to a bio-effective molecule.

Further provided is a fusion molecule generated as described, comprising: an insertion sequence and an acceptor sequence generated by circular permutation, wherein either the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence binds to a nucleic acid molecule, and wherein nucleic acid binding activity is coupled to the response of the respective other sequence of the fusion molecule to a signal.

Yet another embodiment is a fusion molecule generated as described wherein either the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence associates with a bio-effective molecule, and disassociates from the bio-effective molecule, when the respective other sequence of the fusion molecule binds to a cellular marker of a pathological condition.

Another variation is a fusion molecule capable of switching from a non-toxic to a toxic state, comprising: an insertion sequence and an acceptor sequence generated according to any of the above methods wherein either the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence binds to a cellular marker of a pathology, and wherein binding of the marker to the fusion molecule switches the fusion molecule from a non-toxic state to a toxic state. Other fusion molecules of this type are capable of switching from a toxic state to a less toxic state.

The invention further provides “modified” molecular switches generated according to the above methods, wherein as a result of modification, for example by mutagenesis, the switch is responsive to at least one ligand that differs from a ligand recognized by an unmodified form of the same switch.

Yet a further aspect of the invention is a molecular switch for controlling a cellular pathway, comprising: a fusion molecule comprising an insertion sequence and an acceptor sequence generated according to any of the above methods, wherein the states of the insertion and acceptor sequences are coupled, and responsive to a signal, and wherein the state of either the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence modulates the activity or expression of a molecular pathway molecule in a cell.

Further provided are libraries of molecular switches made according to the methods of the invention by generating insertion and/or acceptor sequences by circular permutation. The step of insertion can be repeated a plurality of times with a plurality of first and second nucleic acid molecules, to generate a library of acceptor sequences comprising circularized sequences. Preferred library members comprise a first nucleic acid sequence encoding a first polypeptide having a first state, the first nucleic acid sequence having been circularly permuted and inserted into a second nucleic acid sequence encoding a second polypeptide having a second state.

Some versions of the libraries can be produced by iterative processing of at least one existing library, generated according to any of the above-described methods. In one variation, a selected circularly permuted insert sequence generated from a first library is inserted into an acceptor sequence, to generate a second library having a plurality of members, each of which comprise the selected circularly permuted insert sequence. In one embodiment of such a library, the selected circularly permuted insert sequence is inserted at a random site in the acceptor sequence. In another embodiment, the selected circularly permuted insert sequence is inserted at a non-random site in the acceptor sequence.

The invention further provides isolated nucleic acids encoding molecular switch proteins. Preferred nucleic acids comprise nucleotide sequences selected from any of SEQ ID NOS: 35, 37, 39, 41, 43, 45, 47, 49, 51, 53, 56, 58, 60, 62, 64, 66, 68, 70, 72, and 74, or an effective fragment thereof.

Yet another aspect of the invention are molecular switch proteins comprising an amino acid sequence selected from any of SEQ ID NOS: 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50, 52, 54, 55, 57, 59, 61, 63, 65, 67, 69, 71, 73, and 75, or an effective fragment thereof.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The objects and features of the invention can be better understood with reference to the following detailed description and accompanying drawings.

FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram illustrating two strategies using circular permutation and domain insertion for generating libraries of molecular switches according to the invention.

FIG. 2 illustrates steps in creating a cyclized gene using a DKS linker according to the invention.

FIG. 3 illustrates steps in creating a cyclized gene using a GSGGG linker according to the invention.

FIG. 4 is a diagram illustrating steps in preparing an acceptor DNA sequence for insertion of an insertion DNA sequence at a specific site in the acceptor DNA sequence according to the invention.

FIGS. 5A-G are schematic diagrams depicting several applications of the molecular switches of the invention.

FIGS. 6A-C illustrate a novel fusion molecule comprising sequences from an effector protein (maltose binding protein, MBP) and an enzyme β-lactamase, BLA) according to an aspect the invention. FIG. 6A shows the steps involved in creating the fusion molecule. FIG. 6B is a schematic diagram illustrating the amino acid sequence of the fusion protein, termed RG13. FIG. 6C is a drawing illustrating the structure of the RG13 fusion protein.

FIGS. 7A-C are three graphs demonstrating characteristics of switch activity of RG13, a model molecular switch of the invention. FIG. 7A shows that enzyme activity (nitrocefin hydrolysis) is specific to ligands of MBP. FIG. 7B shows reversible switching using competing ligand. FIG. 7C shows reversible switching after dialysis.

FIG. 8 is a schematic diagram illustrating coupling of ligand and substrate binding.

FIGS. 9A-D show comparisons of characteristics of molecular switches according to the invention. FIG. 9A shows dissociation constants for maltose as a function of apo MBP closure angle. FIGS. 9B-D show steady-state kinetic parameters of nitrocefin hydrolysis of the molecular switches.

FIG. 10 is a graph showing velocity of nitrocefin hydrolysis by a molecular switch according to the invention as a function of effector (maltose) concentration.

FIG. 11 is a schematic diagram illustrating a strategy for creating a library in which a circularly permuted bla gene is inserted into a specific location in the gene for MBP, according to an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 12 is a schematic diagram illustrating a strategy for creating a library in which a specific circularly permuted version of the bla gene is randomly inserted into a plasmid containing the gene for MBP, according to an embodiment of the invention.

FIGS. 13A and B depict a schematic diagram illustrating construction schemes and structures of switches isolated from libraries constructed according to the invention.

FIGS. 14A-D are four graphs showing enzymatic characteristics of particular embodiments of molecular switches according to the invention.

FIG. 15 is a schematic diagram depicting strategies for creating a novel switch from an existing switch that responds to a particular signal molecule (in this case maltose).

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The invention provides improved molecular switches that couple external signals to functionality, methods of making these molecules involving circular permutation of nucleic acid and amino acid sequences, and methods of using the same. The switches according to the invention can be used, for example, to regulate gene transcription, target drug delivery to specific cells, transport drugs intracellularly, control drug release, provide conditionally active proteins, perform metabolic engineering, and modulate cell signaling pathways. Libraries comprising the switches generated by circular permutation, and expression vectors and host cells for expressing the switches are also provided.

DEFINITIONS

The following definitions are provided for specific terms which are used in the following written description.

As used herein, a “molecular switch” refers to a molecule which generates a measurable change in state in response to a signal. In one aspect, a molecular switch is capable of switching from at least one state to at least one other state in response to the signal. Preferably, when a portion of the molecule responds to the signal, the portion become activated (i.e., turns “ON”) or inactivated (i.e., turns “OFF”). In response to this change in state, the state of another portion of the fusion molecule will change (e.g., turn ON or OFF). In one aspect, a switch molecule turns ON one portion of the molecule when another portion is turned OFF. In another aspect, the switch turns ON one portion of the molecule, when the other portion is turned ON. In still another aspect, the switch molecule turns OFF one portion of the molecule when the other portion is turned ON. In a further aspect, the switch molecule turns OFF when the other portion is turned OFF.

In some aspects of the invention, a molecular switch exists in more than two states, i.e., not simply ON or OFF. For example, a portion of the fusion molecule may display a series of states (e.g., responding to different levels of signal), while another portion of the fusion molecule responds at each state, with a change in one or more states. A molecular switch also can comprise a plurality of fusion molecules responsive to a signal and which mediate a function by changing the state of at least a portion of the molecule (preferably, in response to a change in state of another portion of the molecule). While the states of individual fusion molecules in the population may be ON or OFF, the aggregate population of molecules may not be able to mediate the function unless a threshold number of molecules switch states. Thus, the “state” of the population of molecules may be somewhere in between ON or OFF depending on the number of molecules which have switched states. In one aspect, a molecular switch comprises a heterogeneous population of fusion molecules comprising members which switch states upon exposure to different levels of signal. In other aspects of the invention, however, the state of a single molecule may be somewhere in between ON or OFF. For example, a molecule may comprise a given level of activity, ability to bind, etc., in one state which is switched to another given level of activity, ability to bind, etc., in another state (i.e., an activity, ability to bind, etc., measurably higher or lower than the activity, ability to bind, etc., observed in the previous state).

As used herein, a “state” refers to a condition of being. For example, a “state of a molecule” or a “state of a portion of a molecule” can be a conformation, binding affinity, or activity (e.g., including, but not limited to, ability to catalyze a substrate; ability to emit light, transfer electrons, transport or localize a molecule, modulate transcription, translation, replication, supercoiling, and the like).

As defined herein, a molecule, or portion thereof, whose state is “activated” refers to a molecule or portion thereof which performs an activity, such as catalyzing a substrate, emitting light, transferring electrons, transporting or localizing a molecule; changing conformation; binding to a molecule, etc.

As defined herein, a molecule, or portion thereof, whose state is “inactivated” refers to a molecule or portion thereof which is, at least temporarily, unable to perform an activity or exist in a particular state (e.g., bind to a molecule, change conformation, etc.).

As used herein, “coupled” refers to a state which is dependent on another state such that a measurable change in the other state is observed. As used herein, “measurable” refers to a state that is significantly different from a baseline or a previously existing state as determined in a suitable assay using routine statistical methods (e.g., setting p<0.05).

As used herein, “a signal” refers to a molecule or condition that causes a reaction. Signals include, but are not limited to, the presence, absence, or level, of molecules (nucleic acids, proteins, peptides, organic molecules, small molecules), ligands, metabolites, ions, organelles, cell membranes, cells, organisms (e.g., pathogens), and the like; as well as the presence, absence, or level of chemical, optical, magnetic, or electrical conditions, and can include conditions such as degrees of temperature and/or pressure. A chemical condition can include a level of ions, e.g., pH.

As used herein, “responsive to a signal” refers to a molecule whose state is coupled to the presence, absence, or level of the signal.

As used herein, “an insertion sequence” refers to a polymeric sequence which is contained within another polymeric sequence (e.g., an “acceptor sequence”) and which conditionally alters the state of the other polymeric sequence. An insertion sequence or acceptor sequence can comprise a polypeptide sequence, nucleic acid sequence (DNA sequence, aptamer sequence, RNA sequence, ribozyme sequence, hybrid sequence, modified or analogous nucleic acid sequence, etc.), carbohydrate sequence, and the like. Nucleic acid and amino acid sequences for use as acceptor and insertion sequences in the invention can be naturally occurring sequences, engineered sequences (for example, modified natural sequences), or sequences designed de novo.

As used herein, an “effective fragment” of a nucleic acid or amino acid sequence can include any portion of a full length sequence useful in a molecular switch that has at least 80% of the functional activity of the corresponding full-length sequence, preferably at least about 90% and more preferably at least about 95% of that function. By an “effective fragment” of a molecular switch or related phrase is meant a portion of a molecular switch protein, or a nucleic acid encoding the same, that has at least 80% of the activity of the corresponding full-length protein or nucleic acid, determined by an appropriate assay for activity of the particular molecular switch.

As used herein, “multistable” refers to a fusion molecule which is capable of existing in at least two states.

As used herein, “bistable” refers to a fusion molecule capable of existing in two states.

As used herein, “range of states” refers to a series of states in which a fusion molecule can exist. For example, a range of states can comprise a range of binding activities, a range of light-emitting activities, a range of catalysis efficiencies, and the like.

As used herein, “a change in state” refers to a measurable difference in a state of being of a molecule, as determined by an assay appropriate for that state.

As used herein, “a graded response” refers to the ability of a fusion molecule to switch to a series of states in response to a particular threshold signal.

As used herein, “modulates” or “modulated” or “modulatable” refers to a measurable change in a state or activity or function. Preferably, where an activity is being described, “modulated” refers to an at least 2-fold, at least 5-fold, at least 10-fold, at least 20-fold or higher, increase or decrease in activity, or an at least 10%, at least 20%, at least 30%, at least 40% or at least 50% increase or decrease in activity. However, more generally, any difference which is measurable and statistically different from a baseline is encompassed within the term “modulated.”

As used herein, a “less active state” is a state which is at least about 2-fold less active compared to a given reference state as measured using an assay suitable for measuring that state, or about at least 10%, at least about 20%, at least about 30%, at least about 40%, at least about 50%, at least about 60%, at least about 70%, at least about 80%, at least about 90% or at least about 100% less active. More generally, any decrease which is measurable and statistically different from baseline is encompassed within the term “less active state.”

As used herein, a “less toxic state” refers to a measurable increase in the LD₅₀ (i.e., lethal dose which has a 50% probability of causing death) or LC₅₀ (i.e., lethal concentration which has a 50% probability of causing death). Preferably, a less toxic state is one which is associated with an at least about 10% increase, at least about 20%, at least about 30%, at least about 40%, at least about 50%, at least about 60%, at least about 70%, at least about 80%, at least about 90% or at least about 100% increase in LD₅₀ or LC₅₀.

As used herein, “a bio-effective molecule” refers to bioactive molecule which can have an effect on the physiology of a cell or which can be used to image a cell. In one aspect, a “bio-effective molecule” is a pharmaceutical agent or drug or other material that has a therapeutic effect on the cell.

As used herein, “a cellular marker of a pathological condition” refers to a molecule which is associated with a cell, e.g., intracellularly or extracellularly, and whose presence or level correlates with the presence of the disease, i.e., the marker is found in, or on, cells, or is secreted by cells, exhibiting the pathology at levels which are significantly different than observed for cells not exhibiting the pathology

As used herein, “a molecular pathway molecule” refers to a molecule whose activity and/or expression affects the activity and/or expression of at least two other molecules. Preferably, a molecular pathway molecule is a molecule involved in a metabolic or signal transduction pathway. A pathway molecule can comprise a protein, polypeptide, peptide, small molecule, ion, cofactor, organic and inorganic molecule, and the like.

As used herein, “modulating a molecular pathway” refers to a change in the expression and/or activity of at least one pathway molecule.

As used herein, “at an insertion site” of a nucleic acid molecule refers to from about 1 to 21 nucleotides immediately flanking the insertion site.

As used herein, “randomly inserting” refers to insertion at non-selected sites in a polymeric sequence. In one aspect, “random insertion” refers to insertion that occurs in a substantially non-biased fashion, i.e., there is a substantially equal probability of inserting between members of any pairs of monomers (e.g., nucleotides or amino acids) in an acceptor molecule comprising a given number of monomeric sequences. However, in another aspect, random insertion has some degree of bias, e.g., there is a greater than equal probability of inserting at different sites. Minimally, the probability of insertion at a site in an acceptor sequence is greater than zero but less than one.

As used herein, “a new activity” refers to an activity which is not found in either donor or acceptor sequences. Generally, fusion molecules according to the invention comprise a new activity in that the activity of the acceptor sequence or insertion sequence is newly coupled to the state of the respective other portion of the sequence. An insertion or acceptor sequence also may comprise a catalytic site which responds to (e.g., catalyzes) a substrate provided in the form of the respective other portion of the fusion molecule, thereby producing a fusion molecule which comprises an activity present in neither the original catalytic site or the substrate (e.g., such as the ability to self-cleave in the presence of a signal).

As used herein, “a nuclear regulatory sequence” refers to a nucleic acid sequence which is capable of modulating the activity of another nucleic acid in cis or in trans. Types of activities regulated include, but are not limited to, modulating transcription, translation, replication, recombination, or supercoiling. A nucleic acid regulatory sequence can include promoter elements, operator elements, repressor elements, enhancer sequences, ribosome binding sites, IRES sequences, origins of replication, recombination hotspots, topoisomerase binding sequences, and the like.

As used herein, “altered by bisection” refers to a change in state upon fragmenting a polypeptide into two pieces. The term “bisection” does not imply that the polypeptide is divided into fragments of equal size; rather fragments can be generated by cleaving anywhere along the length of the primary sequence of the amino acid.

As used herein, “selecting for restoration of function or state” refers to selection for restoration of a function or state which is sufficiently similar to that of the original function under assay conditions suitable for evaluating the function or state. As used herein, “sufficiently similar” refers to a state that can achieve the original function in an effective manner. For example, when the function/state is binding, restoration of function/state can be evaluated by generating Scatchard plots and/or determining K_(d). When the function/state is the ability of a molecule to generate light, restoration can be measured spectrophotometrically, for example.

As used herein, a “modification” of a polypeptide refers to an addition, substitution or deletion of one or more amino acids in a polypeptide which does not substantially alter the state of the polypeptide. For example, where a state is an activity of a polypeptide, a modification results in no more than a 10% decrease or increase in the activity of the polypeptide, and preferably no more than a 5% decrease or increase in the activity of the polypeptide.

As used herein, the terms “cyclization,” and “cyclized” in respect to a nucleic acid or protein sequence or fragment thereof, refer to the process of taking a non-cyclized sequence of nucleic acid or amino acid and converting it to a cyclized form. For example, a “cyclized” nucleic acid is a form of nucleic acid in which every nucleotide in the nucleic acid sequence is covalently bonded to exactly two other nucleotides, typically through phosphate bridges between the 3′ and 5′ positions of the sugar residue of the nucleotide. This is distinguished from a “linear” form of a nucleic acid sequence in which the nucleotides on the 5′ and 3′ ends are attached to only one nucleotide. In a cyclized form of an amino acid sequence, the N- and C-termini are fused generally through a linker sequence. If the original N- and C-termini are proximal to one other, generally a shorter linker is used than if they are farther apart.

As used herein, the term “circularly permuted” refers to a nucleic acid or protein sequence in which the primary sequence differs from the original non-circularly permuted sequence in a specific way. For a nucleic acid, the circularly permuted sequence differs in that a continuous sequence that was on the 3′ end in the non-circularly permuted sequence is attached to the 5′ end in the circularly permuted sequence. The circularly permuted nucleic acid may or may not have a linker sequence between the original 5′ and 3′ ends. For a protein, the circularly permuted sequence differs in that a continuous sequence that was on the C-terminus in the non-circularly permuted sequence is attached to the N-terminus in the circularly permuted sequence. The circularly permuted protein may or may not have a linker sequence between the original N- and C-termini A circularly permuted sequence can be conceptualized as joining the ends of an original, linear non-circularly permuted sequence to form a cyclized sequence, and converting the cyclized sequence back to a linear sequence by breaking the bonds at a new location. Although a circularly permuted sequence can be created in this manner, as used herein, the term “circularly permuted sequence” can also include the same sequence created by other means not involving a cyclized intermediate. “Randomly circularly permuted” as used herein refers to a sequence in which a circularly permuted sequence is created in which the site of circular permutation is determined by a random, semi-random or stochastic process.

Generating Fusion Molecules Using Random Circular Permutation

In one aspect, the invention includes a method for assembling a fusion molecule comprising randomly circularly permuting an insertion sequence and inserting the insertion sequence into an acceptor sequence. Exemplary insertion and acceptor sequences including known “domain” sequences that can be combined to form fusion molecules are discussed in further detail infra, and generally include any two sequences desired to be functionally combined in a fusion molecule to form a molecular switch.

By using a combinatorial approach, a plurality of potential switches is created from which to select switches with optimized characteristics. This method is advantageous over existing domain insertion methods in that vastly increased numbers of geometric configurations between the acceptor sequence and the insertion sequence can be generated and made available for testing. As discussed, the switching behavior achieved to date by existing methods is generally modest (i.e., less than about 2-fold effect). See, for example, PCT Publication WO 03/078575, herein incorporated by reference, and Guntas and Ostermeier (2004). As shown in Examples herein, the invention provides significantly improved molecular switches, for example with switching activity up to at least about 35-fold, and modified switches that respond to novel effector molecules.

A number of different strategies can be used to create the fusion molecules of the instant invention. FIG. 1 shows two preferred strategies for creating molecular switches using random circular permutation of DNA in combination with domain insertion. The strategies are generally applicable to creating any desired molecular switches, and are illustrated in FIG. 1 and several Examples herein, using exemplary fusions that combine sequences from two non-homologous proteins, in this case an enzyme (i.e., E. coli TEM β-lactamase, BLA) with sequences from an effector or signal protein (in this case, E. coli maltose binding protein, MBP) that responds to a signal (i.e., maltose). As shown below, the BLA-MBP fusion proteins produced by the methods of the invention can act as molecular switches, for example by functioning as BLA enzymes only in the presence of maltose.

Preparing Circularly Permuted Insert Genes

Referring to FIG. 1, circular permutation of at least one of the genes (in this case the insert gene) is central to the method. Although circular permutation of the insert gene is shown, circular permutation of the acceptor sequence, or both sequences, is within the invention. In the example shown in FIG. 1, BLA is the insert gene, and MBP is the acceptor gene.

As is known in the art, a circularly permuted protein has its original N- and C-termini fused and new N- and C-termini created by a break elsewhere in the sequence. The insert gene is circularly permutated using any suitable technique. Exemplary techniques for circular permutation by chemical or genetic methods include but are not limited to those described for example by Goldenberg and Creighton (1983), and Heinemann and Hahn (1995). A particularly preferred genetic method for random circular permutation is that of Graf and Schachmann (1996). See also Ostermeier and Benkovic (2001).

Referring to the central portion of FIG. 1, a preferred method of randomly circularly permuting a sequence can generally include the following steps:

(i) isolating a linear fragment of double-stranded DNA of the gene to be randomly circularly permuted with a linker sequence and flanking compatible ends;

(ii) cyclizing the DNA fragment by ligation under dilute conditions;

(iii) randomly linearizing the cyclized gene, for example using digestion by a nuclease such as DNaseI under conditions in which the enzyme, on average, makes one double-strand break;

(iv) repairing nicks and gaps, for example using enzymes such as DNA polymerase and DNA ligase, respectively; and

(v) ligating the fragment into a desired vector comprising the acceptor sequence by blunt end ligation, to create a library of randomly circularly permuted sequences.

Preferred methods for preparing cyclized genes include a step of adding DNA that codes for a “linker” to link the original N- and C-termini Any suitable linker sequences can be used for this purpose. Preferred methods of cyclizing a gene utilize linkers such a “DKS linker” (Osuna et al., 2002) or a flexible pentapeptide linker such as a “GSGGG linker” having the amino acid sequence GSGGG (SEQ ID NO: 1). See also Example 1, infra, for further details. Generally, the gene fragment of interest (for example a fragment encoding a selected amino acid sequence, such as amino acids 24-286 of the β-lactamase protein), is amplified by a suitable technique such as polymerase chain reaction (PCR) under conditions resulting in flanking of the selected sequence by restriction enzyme site sequences coding for the linkers, and is then cloned into a suitable vector such as pGem T-vector (Promega). Exemplary cloning vectors containing the sequences comprising linkers are indicated in FIG. 1 as pBLA-CP(DKS) or pBLA-CP(GSGGG).

The fragments to be cyclized are then released from the cloning vector by digestion with a suitable restriction enzyme and purified, for example by agarose gel electrophoresis. Cyclizing is achieved, for example, by treating with a ligase such as T4 DNA ligase. The cyclized (circular) fragments are subsequently purified and subjected to circular permutation (step iii above). Exemplary circularized genes comprising DKS and GSGGG linkers according to the invention are shown in FIGS. 2 and 3, respectively.

Referring again to FIG. 1, the circularized genes are randomly linearized, by subjecting them to cleavage with a digestion enzyme that makes on average one double-strand break in the circularized DNA. A preferred enzyme for use in this step is a nuclease. A particularly preferred enzyme is DNaseI. The conditions for nuclease digestion can be determined experimentally by varying the amount of enzyme added and analyzing the digested products by agarose gel electrophoresis. Generally, approximately 1 milliunit of DNaseI per microgram of DNA (at a concentration of 10 micrograms per ml) for an 8-minute digestion at 22° C. is suitable, but will vary somewhat for each library. See also Example 1 for further details of suitable conditions for the digestion step. In addition to digestion by nucleases (e.g., DNAse, S1, exonucleases, restriction endonucleases and the like), other methods for introducing breaks in sequences can be used. For example, mechanical shearing, chemical treatment, and/or radiation can be used. Generally, the method for introducing breaks is not intended to be limiting.

Libraries Comprising Circularly Permuted Insert Sequences

In one aspect, libraries comprising a plurality of library members are provided by the invention. Each library member comprises a first nucleic acid sequence encoding a first polypeptide having a first state, the first nucleic acid sequence having been randomly circularly permuted and inserted into a second nucleic acid encoding a second polypeptide having a second state. The libraries can be constructed in any suitable manner known in the art of molecular biology.

In one preferred type of library, the randomly circularly permuted sequences are randomly inserted into acceptor sequences, a strategy which maximizes the number of possible combinations of insertion and acceptor sequences. Several different strategies can be used to make such “random insertion” libraries. One preferred embodiment of the method, i.e., “Circular Permutation of Insert and Random Domain Insertion,” is shown on the left side of FIG. 1. In this embodiment, the circularly permuted insertion sequence is inserted at a random site in a vector, such as a plasmid, comprising the acceptor sequence. In variations of this method, (both shown in FIG. 1), entire libraries of circularly permuted insert sequences can be randomly inserted into the acceptor sequences, or specific circularly permuted versions of a selected sequence can be randomly inserted into the vector. (See, for example, FIG. 12.) See also Example 5 and FIG. 13 showing various strategies including iterative approaches for constructing libraries using circularly permuted DNA, including selected preferred sequences previously generated by circular permutation according to the invention. See, for example, the descriptions of Libraries 6 and 7 in Example 5.

Preparing Target (Acceptor) DNA for Random Insertion Libraries

As discussed, in one aspect, libraries are constructed in which an insertion sequence has been randomly inserted into an acceptor sequence. Preferably, such libraries are generated by randomly inserting a nucleic acid fragment encoding an insertion sequence into a nucleic acid fragment encoding an acceptor sequence.

Existing methods for random insertion can be categorized into one of two strategies: insertion via transposons and insertion after a random double stranded break in DNA using one or a combination of nucleases. A variety of transposons have been used to deliver short, in-frame insertions of 4-93 amino acids (e.g., Hayes and Hallet, 2000, Trends Microbiol. 8: 571-7; and Manoil and Traxler, 2000, Methods 20: 55-61). However, although transposons are an efficient method for delivering an insertion, insertion methods are preferred which create libraries with direct insertions, deletions at the insertion site, or variability in the amount of deletions or tandem duplication or variability in the distribution of direct insertions, deletions and tandem duplications.

Random insertion using nuclease treatment, on the other hand, can create such libraries. These methods typically are used for the insertion of short sequences into a target gene for example during linker scanning mutagenesis. These methods generally differ in the strategy used to produce a random, double-strand break in supercoiled plasmid DNA containing the gene to be inserted.

Any suitable procedure for randomly inserting a first sequence into second sequence can be used. Exemplary methods are described, for example, in PCT Publication WO 03/078575, herein incorporated by reference. As discussed, the use of BLA and MBP as respective insertion and acceptor sequences, and the use of particular vectors are merely exemplary; potentially any two proteins can be functionally coupled in this manner following random circular permutation of one or both sequences.

To prepare a random insertion library, a target vector comprising the nucleic acid encoding the acceptor polypeptide is preferably randomly linearized (see FIG. 1, left side). For linearization, a variety of different nucleases and digestion schemes can be used. For example, the vector may be exposed to DNase/Mn²⁺ digestion followed by polymerase/ligase repair; S1 nuclease digestion followed by polymerase/ligase repair; or S1 nuclease digestion which is not repaired. The three schemes differ in (a) the methods used to create the random double-stranded break in the target plasmid and (b) whether or not the nucleic acid (e.g., DNA) is repaired by polymerase/ligase treatment, or other methods. However, it should be apparent to those of skill in the art that any method of introducing breaks into a DNA molecule can be used (e.g., such as digestion by mung bean nucleases, endonucleases, restriction enzymes, exposure to chemical agents, irradiation, and/or mechanical shearing) and that the methods of introducing breaks described above are not intended to be limiting.

Preferably, digestion is controlled such that a significant fraction of DNA is undigested in order maximize the amount of linear DNA that has only one double strand break. Key features for optimizing DNase I digestion include the use of Mg²⁺ free DNaseI (Roche Molecular Biochemicals), a digestion temperature of 22° C. and 1 mM Mn²⁺ instead of Mg²⁺ to increase the ratio of double strand breaks to nicks (see, e.g., as described in Campbell and Jackson, 1980, J. Biol. Chem. 255: 3726-35).

The DNA can be repaired using methods known in the art, for example, using T4 DNA ligase and T4 DNA polymerase (see, e.g., Graf and Schachman, 1996, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 93: 11591-11596), and dephosphorylated. Ligation with nucleic acids encoding the insert is performed and nucleic acids (e.g., library members) are collected.

Preparing Target (Acceptor)DNA for Site-Specific Insertion Libraries

Referring again to FIG. 1, another aspect of the invention is shown on the right side of the Figure (“Random Circular Permutation of Insert and Domain Insertion at a Specific Site). In this approach, the circularly permuted insertion sequence is inserted into a selected site in the acceptor sequence. Any suitable site can be selected in the acceptor sequence, based upon desired functional outcome and knowledge of the structure of the acceptor sequence. For example, this site could be a site previously shown to be useful for creating molecular switches (as is demonstrated in Examples below) or a site that is predicted, by computational methods or other means, to be useful in creating a molecular switch.

For insertion at a specific site, plasmids comprising insertion sequences can be modified as shown in FIG. 4, for example by insertion of inverted SapI sites between particular bases such that digestion with SapI and subsequent filling in of the resulting overhangs using Klenow polymerase in the presence of dNTPs results in a bisected perfectly blunt sequence on one side (e.g., MBP [1-165]) and a perfectly blunt sequence (e.g., MBP [164-370]) on the other side. SapI is a type IIS restriction enzyme that cuts outside its recognition sequence. Other type IIS restriction enzymes can also be used, as well as non-type IIS restriction enzymes. The randomly permuted insert sequence is subsequently inserted into the acceptor sequence at the selected site (FIGS. 1 and 11). See also Examples 1 and 4, supra.

Target Vectors Comprising Acceptor Sequences

In one aspect, construction of a library comprises the initial step of constructing and testing a target vector, i.e., a vector comprising a nucleic acid encoding an acceptor sequence. For example, a gene or gene fragment which encodes a polypeptide is cloned into a vector, such as a plasmid. Preferably, the polypeptide exists in a state at least under certain conditions, i.e., comprises an activity, can bind a molecule, exist in a conformation, emit light, transfer electrons, catalyze a substrate, etc. under those conditions.

Preferably, the plasmid comprises a reporter sequence for monitoring the efficacy of the cloning process. Suitable reporter genes include any genes that express a detectable gene product which may be RNA or protein. Examples of reporter genes, include, but are not limited to: CAT (chloramphenicol acetyl transferase); luciferase, and other enzyme detection systems, such as β-galactosidase, firefly luciferase, bacterial luciferase, phycobiliproteins (e.g., phycoerythrin); GFP; alkaline phosphatase; and genes encoding proteins conferring drug/antibiotic resistance, or which encode proteins required to complement an auxotrophic phenotype. Other useful reporter genes encode cell surface proteins for which antibodies or ligands are available. Expression of the reporter gene allows cells to be detected or affinity purified by the presence of the surface protein.

The reporter gene also may be a fusion gene that includes a desired transcriptional regulatory sequence, for example, to select for a fusion molecule whose switching functions include the ability to modulate transcription.

Vectors for Expressing Fusion Molecules

Identification of desired fusion molecules, whether created by random or site-specific insertions, can be facilitated by the use of expression vectors in creating the libraries described above. Such expression vectors additionally can be useful for generating large amounts of fusion molecules (e.g., for delivery to a cell, or organism, for use in vitro or in vivo).

Thus, in one aspect, library members comprise regulatory sequences (e.g., such as promoter sequences) which can be either constitutively active or inducible which are operatively linked to acceptor sequences comprising insertion sequences. Regulatory sequences can comprise promoters and/or enhancer regions from a single gene or can combine regulatory elements of more than one gene. In a preferred embodiment, the regulatory sequences comprise strong promoters which allow high expression in cells, particularly in mammalian cells. For example, the promoter can comprise a CMV promoter and/or a Tet regulatory element.

Library members also can comprise promoters to facilitate in vitro translation (e.g., T7, T4, or SP6 promoters). Such constructs can be used to produce amounts of fusion molecules in sufficient quantity to verify initial screening results (e.g., the ability of the molecules to function as molecular switches).

The expression vectors can be self-replicating extrachromosomal vectors and/or vectors which integrate into a host genome. In one aspect, the expression vectors are designed to have at least two replication systems, allowing them to be replicated and/or expressed and/or integrated in more than one host cell (e.g., a prokaryotic, yeast, insect, and/or mammalian cell). For example, the expression vectors can be replicated and maintained in a prokaryotic cell and then transferred (e.g., by transfection, transformation, electroporation, microinjection, cell fusion, and the like) to a mammalian cell.

The expression vectors can include sequences which facilitate integration into a host genome (e.g., such as a mammalian cell). For example, the expression vector can comprise two homologous sequences flanking the nucleic acid sequence encoding the fusion molecule, facilitating insertion of the nucleic acid expressing the fusion molecule into the host genome through recombination between the flanking sequences and sequences in the host genome. Sequences such as lox-cre sites also can be provided for tissue-specific inversion of the fusion molecule nucleic acid with respect to a regulatory sequence to which the fusion molecule nucleic acid is operably linked.

Integration into the host genome may be monitored by screening for the expression of a reporter sequence included in the expression vector, by the expression of the unique fusion molecule (e.g., by monitoring transcription via Northern blot analysis or translation by an immunoassay), and/or by the presence of the switching activity in the cell.

Evaluating Libraries for Identification of Fusion Molecules

In one aspect, transformants are selected which express a reporter gene included in the target vector, such as a drug resistance gene to initially screen for fusion molecules. Alternatively, or additionally, transformants can be selected in which the state of the insertion sequence is coupled to the state of the acceptor sequence. Thus, in one aspect, the existence of each state is assayed for, as is the dependence of each state on the existence of one or more other states. States may be assayed for simultaneously, or sequentially, in the same host cell or in clones of host cells. Fusion molecules also can be isolated from host cells (or clones thereof) and their states can be assayed for in vitro.

For example, in one aspect, the enzymatic activity of an insertion sequence or acceptor sequence is assayed for at the same time that the binding activity of the respective other portion of the fusion is evaluated to identify fusion molecules in which enzymatic activity is dependent on binding activity.

In another aspect, libraries are screened for fusion molecules which bind to a molecule, such as a bio-effective molecule (e.g., a drug, therapeutic agent, toxic agent, or agent for affecting cellular physiology). The bound fusion molecule is exposed to a cell, and the ability of the fusion molecule to be localized intracellularly is determined. Preferably, release of the bio-effective molecule in response to intracellular localization also is determined.

For example, a cell can be transiently permeabilized (e.g., by exposure to a chemical agent such as Ca²⁺ or by electroporation) and exposed to a fusion molecule associated with the bio-effective molecule (e.g., bound to the bio-effective molecule), allowing the fusion molecule and bound molecule to gain entry into the cell. The ability of the fusion molecule to localize to an intracellular compartment (e.g., to the endoplasmic reticulum, to a lysosomal compartment, nucleus, etc.) along with the bio-effective molecule can be monitored through the presence of a label (e.g., such as a fluorescent label or radioactive label) on the fusion molecule, bio-effective molecule, or both. The label can be conjugated to the fusion molecule and/or the bio-effective molecule using routine chemical methods known in the art. A label also may be provided as part of an additional domain of the fusion molecule. For example, the fusion molecule can comprise a GFP polypeptide or modified form thereof. The localization of the label (and hence the fusion molecule and/or bio-effective molecule) can be determined for example using light microscopy. Release of the bio-effective molecule can be monitored by lysing the cell, immunoprecipitating the fusion molecule, and detecting the amount of labeled bio-effective molecule in the precipitated fraction.

In one aspect, the cell need not be permeabilized to allow entry of the fusion molecule because the fusion molecule comprises a signal sequence that enables the fusion molecule to traverse the cell membrane. Intracellular transport of the bio-effective molecule can be monitored by labeling the bio-effective molecule and examining its localization using light microscopy, FACs analysis, or other methods routine in the art.

In another aspect, insertion libraries are screened for fusion molecules which comprise an insertion sequence or acceptor sequence which associates with a bio-effective molecule and which releases the bio-effective molecule when the respective other portion of the fusion molecule binds to a cellular marker of a pathological condition. Thus, in one aspect, fusion molecules associated with a bio-effective molecule are contacted with cells expressing such a marker and the ability of the fusion molecules to specifically bind to the cell is assayed for, as well as the ability of the fusion molecule to release the bio-effective molecule in response to such binding.

For example, as above, either, or both, the fusion molecule and the bio-effective molecule can be labeled and the localization of the molecules determined. The action of the bio-effective molecule also can be monitored (e.g., the effect of the bio-effective molecule on the cell can be monitored).

In still another aspect, insertion libraries are screened for fusion molecules which can switch from a non-toxic state to a toxic state upon binding of the insertion sequence or acceptor sequence to a cellular marker of a pathology. Fusion molecules can be selected which specifically bind to cells expressing the marker, and the effect of the fusion molecules on cell death can be assessed. Cell death can be monitored using methods routine in the art, including, but not limited to: staining cells with vital dyes, detecting spectral properties characteristic of dead or dying cells, evaluating the morphology of the cells, examining DNA fragmentation, detecting the presence of proteins associated with cell death, and the like. Cell death also can be evaluated by determining the LD₅₀ or LC₅₀ of the fusion molecule.

In a further aspect, the insertion library is screened for fusion molecules which comprise a molecular switch for controlling a cellular pathway. Preferably, the states of the insertion sequence and acceptor sequence in the fusion molecules are coupled and responsive to a signal such that in the presence of the signal, the state of either the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence modulates the activity or expression of a molecular pathway molecule in a cell. A signal can be the presence, absence, or level, of an exogenous or endogenous binding molecule to which either the insertion sequence or acceptor sequence binds, or it can be a condition (e.g., chemical, optical, electrical, etc.) in an environment to which the fusion molecule is exposed. The ability of the fusion molecule to control a pathway can be monitored by examining the expression and/or activity of pathway molecules which act downstream of a pathway molecule whose expression and/or activity is being modulated.

In another aspect, fusion molecules are selected in which either the insertion sequence or acceptor sequence binds to a nucleic acid molecule. For example, the ability of the fusion molecules to bind to a nucleic acid immobilized on a solid phase can be monitored (e.g., membrane, chip, wafer, particle, slide, column, microbead, microsphere, capillary, and the like). Preferably, fusion molecules are selected in which nucleic acid binding activity is coupled to a change in state of the respective other sequence of the fusion molecule. For example, nucleic acid binding activity can be coupled to the binding activity of another portion of the fusion molecule, catalysis by the other portion, the light emitting function of the other portion, electron transferring ability of the other portion, ability of the other portion to change conformation, and the like. Preferably, nucleic acid binding activity is coupled to the response of the fusion molecule to a signal.

Nucleic acid binding activity also can be monitored by evaluating the activity of a target nucleic acid sequence to which the fusion molecule binds. For example, in one aspect, the fusion molecule binds to a nucleic acid regulatory sequence which modulates the activity (e.g., transcription, translation, replication, recombination, supercoiling) of another nucleic acid molecule to which the regulatory sequence is operably linked. The nucleic acid regulatory molecule and its regulated sequence can be provided as part of a nucleic acid molecule encoding the fusion molecule or can be provided as part of a separate molecule(s). The nucleic acid binding activity can be monitored in vitro or in vivo. The ability of fusion molecules to bind to a nucleic acid can also be determined in vivo using one-hybrid or two-hybrid systems (for example, see, Hu, et al., 2000, Methods 20: 80-94).

In certain aspects, fusion molecules are selected which bind to a known regulatory sequence or a sequence naturally found in a cell. In other aspects, a sequence which is not known to be a regulatory sequence in a cell is selected for. Preferably, such a sequence binds to the fusion molecule and modulates the activity of another nucleic acid (in cis or in trans). Thus, the fusion molecule can be used to select for novel nucleic acid regulatory sequences. Preferably, the fusion molecule modulates the regulatory activity of the nucleic acid molecule in response to a signal, as described above.

In still a further aspect, the insertion library is screened for fusion molecules which are sensor molecules. Preferably, fusion molecules are screened for in which either the insertion sequence or acceptor sequence binds to a target molecule and wherein the respective other portion of the fusion molecule generates a signal in response to binding. Signals can include: emission of light, transfer of electrons, catalysis of a substrate, binding to a detectable molecule, and the like. To assay for such fusions, members of the library can be screened in the presence of the target molecule (e.g., in solution, or immobilized on a solid support) for the production of the signal.

Fusion Molecules Comprising Coupled Insertion and Acceptor Sequences

In one aspect, a modulatable fusion molecule is provided which comprises an insertion sequence and an acceptor sequence which contains the insertion sequence (Several examples of such fusion molecules are shown, e.g., in FIG. 13). Preferably, the insertion sequence and acceptor sequence are polymeric molecules, e.g., such as polypeptides or nucleic acids. More preferably, both the insertion sequence and acceptor sequence are capable of existing in at least two states and the state of the insertion sequence is coupled to the state of the acceptor sequence upon fusion, such that a change in state in either the insertion sequence or acceptor sequence will result in a change in state of the respective other portion of the fusion. As discussed, a “state” can be a conformation; binding affinity; ability or latent ability to catalyze a substrate; ability or latent ability to emit light; ability or latent ability to transfer electrons; ability or latent ability to withstand degradation (e.g., by a protease or nuclease); ability or latent ability to modulate transcription; ability or latent ability to modulate translation; ability or latent ability to modulate replication; ability or latent ability to initiate or mediate recombination or supercoiling; or otherwise perform a function; and the like.

Preferably, the change in state is triggered by a signal to which the fusion molecule is exposed, e.g., such as the presence, absence, or amount of a small molecule, ligand, metabolite, ion, organelle, cell membrane, cell, organism (e.g., such as a pathogen), temperature change, pressure change, and the like, to which the fusion molecule binds; a change in a condition, such as pH, or a change in the chemical, optical, electrical, or magnetic environment of the fusion molecule. In one aspect, a fusion molecule functions as an ON/OFF switch in response to a signal (e.g., changing from one state to another). For example, when an insertion sequence or acceptor sequence of the fusion molecule binds to a ligand, the respective other half of the fusion may change state (e.g., change conformation, bind to a molecule, release a molecule to which it is bound, catalyze a substrate or stop catalyzing a substrate, emit light or stop emitting light, transfer electrons or stop transferring electrons, activate or inhibit transcription, translation, replication, etc.).

Some fusion molecules according to the invention also can be used to generate graded responses. In this scenario, a fusion molecule can switch from a series of states (e.g., more than two different types of conformations, levels of activity, degrees of binding, levels of light transmission, electron transfer, transcription, translation, replication, etc.). Preferably, the difference in state is one which can be distinguished readily from other states (e.g., there is a significant measurable difference between one state and any other state, as determined using assays appropriate for measuring that state).

More generally, a molecular switch can generate a measurable change in state in response to a signal. For example, a molecular switch can comprise a plurality of fusion molecules each responsive to a signal and for mediating a function in response to a change in state of at least a portion of the molecule. As above, preferably, this change of state occurs in response to a change in the state of another portion of the molecule.

While the states of individual fusion molecules in the population may be ON or OFF, the aggregate population of molecules may not be able to mediate the function unless a threshold number of molecules switch states. Thus, the “state” of the population of molecules may be somewhere in between ON or OFF, depending on the number of molecules which have switched states. This provides an ability to more precisely tune a molecular response to a signal by selecting for molecules which respond to a range of signals and modifying the population of fusion molecules to provide selected numbers of fusion molecules, providing an aggregate switch which can respond to a narrow range or wider range of signal as desired. Thus, in one aspect, a heterogeneous population of fusion molecules is provided comprising members which respond to different levels or ranges of signals. Individual fusion molecules also may exist in states intermediate between ON or OFF; e.g., having a given level of activity, ability to bind to a molecule in one state and a measurably higher or lower level of activity, ability to bind, etc., in a different state.

Insertion Sequences

The size of the insertion in the fusion protein will vary depending on the size of insertion sequence required to confer a particular state on the insertion sequence without significantly disrupting the ability of the acceptor molecule into which it is inserted to change state. Preferably, the effect of the insertion is to couple the change in state of the acceptor molecule to a change in state of the insertion molecule, or vice versa.

Generally, for polypeptide insertions, the size of the insertion sequence can range from about two amino acids to at least about 1000, for example at least about 900, 800, 700, 600, 500, 400, 300, 200, 100, or fewer amino acids. In one aspect, the insertion comprises a domain sequence with a known characterized activity (e.g., a portion of a protein in which bioactivity resides); however, in other aspects, the insertion sequence comprises sequences up to an entire protein sequence.

Acceptor Sequences

Generally, there are no constraints on the size or type of acceptor sequence which can be used. However, in one aspect, an acceptor sequence is a polypeptide whose state resides in a discontinuous domain of a protein (e.g., the amino acids involved in conferring the state/activity of the acceptor sequence are not necessarily contiguous in the primary polypeptide sequence) (see, e.g., as described in Russell and Ponting, 1998, Curr. Opin. Struct. Biol. 8: 364-371, and Jones, et al., 1998, Protein Sci. 7: 233-42).

Suitable polypeptides for acceptor molecules can be identified using domain assignment algorithms such as are known in the art (e.g., such as the PUU, DETECTIVE, DOMAK, and DomainParser, programs). For example, a consensus approach may be used as described in Jones, et al., (1998). Information also can be obtained from a number of molecular modeling databases such as the web-based NIH Molecular Modeling Homepage, or the 3Dee Database described by Dengler, et al., 2001, Proteins 42(3): 332-44. However, the most important criterion for selecting a sequence is its function, e.g., the desired state parameters of the fusion molecule.

However, in a further aspect, no pre-screening is done and an acceptor sequence is selected simply on the basis of a desired activity. The power of the methods according to the invention is that they rely on combinatorial screening to identify any, and preferably, all, combinations of insertions that produce a desired coupling in states of acceptor and insertion molecules.

Domain Sequences in Fusion Proteins

In one aspect, the insertion sequence or acceptor sequence comprises a “domain” sequence having a known state. Domains can be minimal sequences, such as are known in the art, which are associated with a particular known state, or can be an entire protein comprising the domain or a functional fragment thereof.

The insertion and acceptor sequences can be selected from any of the domain sequences described below and can be of like kind (e.g., both catalytic sites, both binding domains, both light emitting domains) or of different kind (e.g., a catalytic site and a binding site, as shown for example in FIG. 6B, a binding site and a light emitting domain; etc.). The domain sequences can be the minimal sequences required to confer a state or activity or can comprise additional sequences. Other insertion and acceptor sequences can be derived from known domain sequences or from newly identified sequences. Such sequences are also encompassed within the scope of the instant invention.

Minimal domain sequences can be defined by site-directed mutagenesis of a sequence having a desired state to determine the minimum amino acids necessary to confer the existence of the state under the appropriate conditions (e.g., such as a minimal binding site sequence or a minimum sequence necessary for catalysis, light emission, etc.). As discussed above, minimal domain sequences also can be defined virtually, using algorithms to identify consensus sequences or areas of likely protein folding. Once a domain sequence has been identified, it can be modified to include additional sequences, as well as insertions, deletions, and substitutions of amino acids so long as they do not substantially affect the state of the domain sequence. While domain sequences can be obtained using nucleic acids encoding appropriate fragments of polypeptides, they also can be synthesized, for example, based on a predicted consensus sequence for a class of molecules which is associated with a particular state. However, as discussed above, in some cases it may be desirable to provide the domain sequence in the form of a native protein comprising the domain.

Suitable domain sequences include extracellular domains which are portions of proteins normally found outside of the plasma membrane of a cell. Preferably, such domains bind to bio-effective molecules. For example, an extracellular domain can include the extracytoplasmic portion of a transmembrane protein, a secreted protein, a cell surface targeting protein, a cell adhesion molecule, and the like. In one aspect, an extracellular domain is a clustering domain, which, upon activation by a bio-effective molecule will dimerize or oligomerize with other molecules comprising extracellular domains.

Intracellular domains also can serve as insertion sequences or acceptor sequences. As used herein, “an intracellular domain” refers to a portion of a protein which generally resides inside of a cell with respect to the cellular membrane. In one aspect, an intracellular domain is one which transduces an extracellular signal into an intracellular response. For example, an intracellular domain can comprise a proliferation domain which signals a cell to enter mitosis (e.g., such as domains from Jak kinase polypeptides, I1-2 receptor β and/or gamma chains, and the like). Other transducer sequences include sequences from the zeta chain of the T cell receptor or any of its homologs (e.g., the eta chain, Fc epsilon R1- gamma and -62 chains, MB1 chain, B29 chain, and the like), CD3 polypeptides (gamma, beta and epsilon), syk family tyrosine kinases (Syk, ZAP 70, and the like), and src family tyrosine kinases (Lck, Fyn, Lyn, and the like).

A transmembrane domain also can be used as an insertion sequence or acceptor sequence. Preferably, a transmembrane domain is able to cross the plasma membrane and can, optionally, transduce an extracellular signal into an intracellular response. Preferred transmembrane sequences include, but are not limited to, sequences derived from CD8, ICAM-2, IL-8R, CD4, LFA-1, and the like.

Transmembrane sequences also can include GPI anchors, e.g., such as the DAF sequence (PNKGSGTTSGTTRLLSGHTCFTLTGLLGTLVTMGLLT) (SEQ ID NO: 2) (see, e.g., Homans, et al., 1988, Nature 333(6170): 269-72; Moran, et al., 1991, J. Biol. Chem. 266: 1250); myristylation sequences (e.g., such as the src sequence MGSSKSKPKDPSQR) (SEQ ID NO: 3) (see Cross, et al., 1984, Mol. Cell. Biol. 4(9): 1834; Spencer, et al., 1993, Science 262: 1019-1024); and palmitoylation sequences (e.g., such as the GRK6 sequence LLQRLFSRQDCCGNCSDSEEELPTR) (SEQ ID NO: 4).

Either the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence can be a localization sequence for localizing a molecule comprising the sequence intracellularly. In one aspect, the localization sequence is a nuclear localization sequence. Generally, a nuclear localization sequence is a short, basic sequence that serves to direct a polypeptide in which it occurs to a cell's nucleus (Laskey, 1986, Ann. Rev. Cell Biol. 2:367-390; Bonnerot, et al., 1987, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 84: 6795-6799; Galileo, et al., 1990, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 87: 458-462, 1990). Suitable nuclear localization sequences include, but are not limited to, the SV40 (monkey virus) large T Antigen sequence (PKKKKKV) (SEQ ID NO: 5) (see, e.g., Kalderon, 1984, et al., Cell 39: 499-509); the human retinoic acid receptor nuclear localization signal (ARRRRP) (SEQ ID NO: 6); NF κβ p50 sequence (EEVQRKRQKL) (SEQ ID NO: 7) (Ghosh et al., 1990, Cell 62: 1019); the NF κβ p65 sequence (EEKRKRTYE) (SEQ ID NO: 8) (Nolan et al., 1991, Cell 64: 961); and nucleoplasmin (Ala Val Lys Arg PAATLKKAGQAKKKKLD) (SEQ ID NO: 9) (Dingwall, et al., 1982, Cell 30:449-458).

The localization sequence can comprise a signaling sequence for inserting at least a portion of the fusion molecule into the cell membrane. Suitable signal sequences include residues 1-26 of the IL-2 receptor beta-chain (see, Hatakeyama et al., 1989, Science 244: 551; von Heijne et al, 1988, Eur. J. Biochem. 174: 671); residues 1-27 of the insulin receptor β chain (see, Hatakeyama, et al., 1989, supra); residues 1-32 of CD8 (Nakauchi, et al., 1985, PNAS USA 82: 5126) and residues 1-21 of ICAM-2 (Staunton, et al., 1989, Nature (London) 339: 61).

The localization sequence also can comprise a lysozomal targeting sequence, including, for example, a lysosomal degradation sequence such as Lamp-2 (KFERQ) (SEQ ID NO: 10) (see, e.g., Dice, 1992, Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 674: 58); a lysosomal membrane sequence from Lamp-1 (MLIPIAGFFALAGLVLIVLIAYLIGRKRSHAGYQTI) (SEQ ID NO: 11) (see, e.g., Uthayakumar, et al., 1995, Cell. Mol. Biol. Res. 41: 405) or Lamp-2 (LVPIAVGAALAGVLILVLLAYFIGLKHHHAGYEQF) (SEQ ID NO: 12) (see, e.g., Konecki et al., 1994, Biochem. Biophys. Res. Comm. 205: 1-5).

Alternatively, the localization sequence can comprise a mitrochondrial localization sequence, including, but not limited to: mitochondrial matrix sequences, such as the MLRTSSLFTRRVQPSLFSRNILRLQST (SEQ ID NO: 13) of yeast alcohol dehydrogenase III (Schatz, 1987, Eur. J. Biochem. 165:1-6); mitochondrial inner membrane sequences, such as the MLSLRQSIRFFKPATRTLCSSRYLL (SEQ ID NO: 14) sequence of yeast cytochrome c oxidase subunit IV (Schatz, 1987, supra); mitochondrial intermembrane space sequences, such as the MFSMLS KRWAQRTLSKSFYSTATGAASKSGKLTQKLVTAGVAAAGITASTLL YADSLTAEAMTA (SEQ ID NO: 15) sequence of yeast cytochrome c1 (Schatz, 1987, supra); or mitochondrial outer membrane sequences, such as the MKSFITRNKTAILATVAATGTAIGAYYYYNQLQQQQQRGKK (SEQ ID NO: 16) sequence of yeast 70 kD outer membrane protein (see, e.g., Schatz, supra).

Other suitable localization sequences include endoplasmic reticulum localizing sequences, such as KDEL (SEQ ID NO: 17) from calreticulin (e.g., Pelham, 1992, Royal Society London Transactions B: 1-10) or the adenovirus E3/19K protein sequence LYLSRRSFIDEKKMP (SEQ ID NO: 18) (Jackson et al., 1990, EMBO J. 9: 3153); and peroxisome targeting sequences, such as the peroxisome matrix sequence (SKL) from Luciferase (Keller et al., 1987, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 4: 3264).

In another aspect, the insertion sequence or acceptor sequence comprises a secretory signal sequence capable of effecting the secretion of the fusion molecule from a cell (see, e.g., Silhavy, et al., 1985, Microbiol. Rev. 49: 398-418). This may be useful for generating a switch molecule which can affect the activity of a cell other than a host cell in which it is expressed. Suitable secretory sequences, include, but are not limited to the MYRMQLLSCIALSLALVTNS (SEQ ID NO: 19) sequence of IL-2 (Villinger, et al., 1995, J. Immunol. 155: 3946); the MATGSRTSLLLAFGLLCLPWLQEGSAFPT (SEQ ID NO: 20) sequence of growth hormone (Roskam et al., 1979, Nucleic Acids Res. 7: 30); the MALWMRLLPLLALLALWGPDPAAAFVN (SEQ ID NO: 21) sequence of preproinsulin (Bell, et al., 1980, Nature 284: 26); the influenza HA protein sequence, MKAKLLVLLYAFVAGDQI (SEQ ID NO: 22) (Sekiwawa, et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 80: 3563); or the signal leader sequence from the secreted cytokine IL4, MGLTSQLLPPLFFLLACAGNFVHG (SEQ ID NO: 23).

In a further aspect, the insertion sequence or acceptor sequence comprises a domain for binding a nucleic acid. The domain can comprise a DNA binding polypeptide or active fragment thereof from a prokaryote or eukaryote. For example, the domain can comprise a polypeptide sequence from a prokaryotic DNA binding protein such as gp 32; a domain from a viral protein, such as the papilloma virus E2 protein; or a domain from a eukaryotic protein, such as p53, Jun, Fos, GCN4, or GAL4. Novel DNA binding proteins also can be generated by mutagenic techniques (see, e.g., as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,198,346).

The insertion sequence or acceptor sequence also can comprise the Ca²⁺ binding domain of a Ca²⁺ binding protein such as calmodulin, parvalbumin, troponin, annexin, and myosin or the ligand domain of a binding protein such as avidin, concanavalin A, ferritin, fibronectin, an immunoglobulin, a T cell receptor, an MHC Class I or Class II molecule, a lipid binding protein, a metal binding protein, a chaperone, a G-protein coupled receptor, and the like.

In addition, the insertion or acceptor sequence can comprise the transport domain of a transport protein such as hemerythrin, hemocyanin, hemoglobin, myoglobin, transferrin, lactoferrin, ovotransferrin, maltose binding protein and transthyretrin.

In another aspect, the insertion or acceptor sequence can comprise the active domain of a blood coagulation protein (e.g., a domain which mediates blood clotting). Exemplary blood clotting proteins include, but are not limited to: decorsin, factor IX, factor X, kallikrein, plasmin/plasminogen, protein C, thrombin/prothrombin, and tissue-type plasminogen activator.

In still another aspect, the insertion or acceptor sequence can comprise the active domain of an electron transport protein (e.g., a domain which confers electron transport activity on a protein). Electron transport proteins include, but are not limited to, amicyanin, azurin, a cytochrome protein, ferrodoxin, flavodoxin, glutaredoxin, methylamine dehydrogenase, plastocyanin, rubredoxin, and thioredoxin.

In a further aspect, the insertion sequence or acceptor sequence comprises the catalytic and/or substrate binding site of an enzyme. Suitable enzymes from which such sites are selected include: a β-lactamase; an acetylcholinesterase; an amylase; a barnase; a deaminase; a kinase (e.g., such as a tyrosine kinase or serine kinase); a phosphatase; an endonuclease; an exonuclease; an esterase; an enzyme involved in a metabolic pathway (e.g., fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase); a glycosidase; a heat shock protein; a lipase; a lysozyme; a neuramidase/sialidase; a phospholipase; a phosphorylase; a pyrophosphatase; a ribonuclease; a thiolase; a polymerase; an isomerase (such as a mutase; triosephosphate isomerase, xylose isomerase, topoisomerase, gyrase); a lyase (such as aconitase, carbonic anhydrase, pyruvate decarboxylase); an oxidoreductase (such as alcohol dehydrogenase, aldose reductase, a catalase, cytochrome C, a peroxidase, a cytochrome p450, a dehydrogenase, a dihydrofolate reductase, a glyceraldehydes-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, a hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase, a lactate dehydrogenase, a peroxidase, a superoxide dismutase, a protease (such as actinidin, α-lytic protease, aminopeptidase, carboxypeptidase, chymosin, chymotrypsin, elastase, endopeptidase, endothiapepsin, HIV protease, Hannuka factor, papain, pepsin, rennin, substilisin, thermolysin, thermitase, and trypsin), a transferase (such as acetyltransferase, aminotransferase, carbamoyltransferase, dihyrolipoamide acetyltransferase, dihydrolipoyl transacetylase, dihydrolipoamide succinyltransferase, a nucleotidyl transferase, a DNA methyltransferase, a formyltransferase, a glycosyltransferase, a phosphotransferase, a phosphoribosyltransferase), a dehalogenase, a racemase, and the like.

The catalytic domain also can be a rhodanese homology domain such as forms the active site in various phosphatases and transferases (e.g., such as found in the Cdc25 family of protein dual specificity phosphatases, the MKP1/PAC1 family of MAP-kinase phosphatases, the Pyp1/Pyp2 family of MAP-kinase phosphatases, and certain ubiquitin hydrolases) (see, e.g., Hofmann, et al., 1998, J. Mol. Biol. 282: 195-208).

Still other domains can include toxins such as cardiotoxin, conotoxin, erabutoxin, momorcharin, momordin, and ricin.

Other domains include, but are not limited to, signaling domains such as the FHA domain, found in protein kinases and transcription factors such as fork head, DUN1, RAD53, SPK1, cds1, MEK1, KAPP, NIPP1, Ki-67, fraH, and KIAA0170 (see, e.g., Hofmann and Bucher, 1995, Trends Biochem. Sci. 20: 347-349); the death domain, a heterodimerization domain present in proteins involved in apoptotic signal transduction and the NFκβ pathway (such as TNFR1, FAS/APO1, NGFR, MORT1/FADD, TRADD, RIP, ankyrin, MyD88, unc-5, unc-44, DAP-kinase, Rb-binding p84, pelle, NFkB, and tube polypeptides) (see, e.g., Hofmann and Tschopp, 1995, FEBS Lett. 371: 321-323); and the G-protein desensitization domain (found in ARK1, GRK, G-protein coupled receptor kinases, egl-10, GAIP, BL34 SST2, flbA, RGP3, RGP4Human GO/G1 switch regulatory protein 8, Human B-cell activation protein BL34, and G-protein coupled receptor kinases) (see, e.g., Hofmann and Bucher, “Conserved Sequence Domains in Cell Cycle Regulatory Proteins”, abstract presented at the joint ISREC/AACR meeting “Cancer and the Cell cycle”, January 1996 in Lausanne).

In one aspect, either the insertion or the acceptor sequence is a light-emitting polypeptide domain such as one obtained from a Green Fluorescent Protein, or modified, or mutant form thereof (collectively referred to as a “GFP”). The wild-type GFP is 238 amino acids in length (Prasher, et al., 1992, Gene 111(2): 229-233; Cody et al., Biochem. 32(5):1212-1218 (1993); Ormo, et al, 1996, Science 273: 1392-1395; and Yang, et al., 1996, Nat. Biotech. 14: 1246-125I). Modified forms are described in WO 98/06737 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,777,079. GFP deletion mutants also can be made. For example, at the N-terminus, it is known that only the first amino acid of the protein may be deleted without loss of fluorescence, while at the C-terminus, up to 7 residues can be deleted without loss of fluorescence (see, e.g., Phillips, et al., 1997, Current Opin. Structural Biol. 7: 821).

The insertion sequence or acceptor sequence additionally can comprise the light-reactive portion of a photoreceptor such as bacteriochlorophyll-A, bacteriorhodopsin, photoactive yellow protein, phycocyanin, and rhodopsin.

Additional domain sequences include ligand-binding domains of ligand-binding proteins. Such proteins include, but not limited to: biotin-binding proteins, lipid-binding proteins, periplasmic binding proteins (e.g., maltose binding protein), lectins, serum albumins, immunoglobulins, T cell receptors, inactivated enzymes, pheromone-binding proteins, odorant-binding proteins, immunosuppressant-binding proteins (e.g., immunophilins such as cyclophilins and FK506-binding proteins), phosphate-binding proteins, sulfate-binding proteins, and the like. Additional binding proteins are described in De Wolf and Brett, 2000, Pharmacological Reviews 52(2): 207-236.]

The domain sequences of the proteins described above are known in the art and can be obtained from a database such as available at the NIH Molecular Modeling Homepage.

Additional Sequences in Fusion Proteins

Fusion molecules can further comprise domain sequences, as described above, in addition to insertion and acceptor sequences. Such domains can comprise states which may or may not be coupled with the states of the other portions of the fusion molecule.

Additional sequences also can be included as part of the fusion molecule which do not alter substantially the states of the insertion sequence or acceptor sequence portion of the fusion molecule. For example, affinity tag sequences can be provided to facilitate the purification or isolation of the fusion molecule. Thus, His6 tags can be employed (for use with nickel-based affinity columns), as well as epitope tags (e.g., for detection, immunoprecipitation, or FACS analysis), such as myc, BSP biotinylation target sequences of the bacterial enzyme BirA, flu tags, lacZ, GST, and Strep tags I and II. Nucleic acids encoding such tag molecules are commercially available.

Stability sequences can be added to the fusion molecule to protect the molecule from degradation (e.g., by a protease). Suitable stability sequences include, but are not limited to, glycine molecules incorporated after the initiation methionine (e.g., MG or MGG) to protect the fusion molecule from ubiquitination; two prolines incorporated at the C-terminus (conferring protection against carboxypeptidase action), and the like.

In some aspects, the fusion molecule can include a linking or tethering sequence between insertion and acceptor sequences or between insertion or acceptor sequences and other domain sequences. For example, useful linkers include glycine polymers, glycine-serine polymers, glycine-alanine polymers, alanine-serine polymers, alanine polymers, and other flexible linkers as are known in the art (see, e.g., Huston, et al., 1988, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 85: 4879; U.S. Pat. No. 5,091,513).

These additional sequences can be included to optimize the properties of the fusion molecules described herein.

Exemplary Fusion Molecules

Exemplary fusion molecules according to the invention are described herein and illustrated schematically in FIGS. 5A-G. Methods of using these fusion molecules as molecular switches in cells are further described infra. It should be apparent to those of skill in the art that these are merely examples of combinations of insertion and acceptor sequences that can be used to form a molecular switch, and are not intended to be limiting.

In one aspect, the invention provides a fusion protein comprising an insertion sequence and an acceptor sequence, wherein either the inserted sequence or the acceptor sequence binds to a DNA molecule, and wherein DNA binding activity is coupled to the response of the respective other sequence of the fusion molecule to a signal. (FIG. 5A.)

In a further aspect, the fusion molecule comprises a molecular switch for controlling a cellular pathway. The fusion molecule comprises an insertion sequence and an acceptor sequence and the states of the insertion sequence and acceptor sequence are coupled, such that the state of either the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence modulates the activity or expression of a molecular pathway molecule in a cell. Preferably, modulation of activity or expression occurs when the respective other portion of the fusion molecule responds to a signal, e.g., binds to an exogenous or endogenous binding molecule (e.g., ligands, small molecules, ions, metabolites, and the like), responds to electrical or chemical properties of a cell, or responds to the optical environment in which a cell is found (e.g., responding to the presence or absence of a particular wavelength(s) of light) (FIG. 5B).

The fusion molecule also can comprise an insertion sequence and acceptor sequence, wherein either the inserted sequence or the acceptor sequence associates with a bio-effective molecule, and disassociates from the bio-effective molecule, when the respective other sequence of the fusion binds to a cellular marker of a pathological condition (FIG. 5C). Such markers can comprise polypeptides, nucleic acids, glycoproteins, lipids, carbohydrates, small molecules, metabolites, pH, ions and the like. Examples of cellular markers of pathological conditions include, but are not limited to cancer-specific or tumor-specific antigens, pathogen-encoded polypeptides (e.g., viral-, bacterial-, protist-, and parasite-encoded polypeptides) as are known in the art.

In another aspect, the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence localizes the fusion molecule intracellularly. Preferably, intracellular localization is coupled to the binding of the fusion molecule to a bio-effective molecule (FIG. 5D).

In still another aspect, the fusion molecule is capable of switching from a non-toxic state to a toxic state. Either the insertion sequence or acceptor sequence may bind to a cellular marker of a pathology (e.g., such as a tumor antigen). Binding of the marker to the fusion protein switches the fusion protein from a non-toxic state or a less toxic state to a toxic state. Similarly, a marker of a healthy cell could be used as a trigger to switch a fusion molecule from a toxic state to a non-toxic state, or to a less toxic state (FIG. 5E).

In yet a further aspect, the fusion molecule can affect a metabolic state in a cell. Either the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence may bind to an effector molecule. Binding of the effector molecule to the fusion protein triggers enzymatic activity by the enzyme. (See FIG. 5F and Examples, infra.)

The invention also provides a sensor molecule comprising an insertion sequence and an acceptor sequence, wherein either the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence binds to a target molecule and wherein the respective other sequence generates a signal in response to binding (FIG. 5G).

Methods of Using Molecular Switches

In one aspect, the invention provides a method for using a molecular switch to modulate a cellular activity. The cellular activity can include an enzyme activity, the activity of one or more cellular pathway molecules, the transduction of a signal, and the like. Modulation may direct, e.g., the switch itself may alter the activity, or indirect, e.g., the switch may function by delivering a bio-effective molecule to the cell which itself modulates the activity. Modulation can occur in vitro (e.g., in cell culture or in a cell extract) or in vivo (e.g., such as in a transgenic organism). Molecular switches comprising fusion polypeptides also can be administered to a cell by delivering such molecules systemically (e.g., through intravenous, intramuscular, or intraperitoneal injections, or through oral administration of either the polypeptides themselves or nucleic acids encoding the polypeptides) or locally (e.g., via injection into a tumor or into an open surgical field, or through a catheter or other medical access device, or via topical administration).

In one aspect, molecular switches are used to conditionally modulate an enzymatic activity in a cell. For example, a switch molecule can be introduced into a cell that comprises an insertion sequence or acceptor sequence which provides the enzymatic activity. Catalysis by the insertion or acceptor sequence is coupled to the response of the respective other portion of the fusion molecule to a signal, such as binding of the other portion to a molecule (e.g., such as an agent administered to the cell or a naturally occurring small molecule), exposure of the cell to particular chemical conditions (e.g., such as pH), electrical conditions (e.g., potential differences), optical conditions (e.g., exposure of the cell to light of specific wavelengths), magnetic conditions and the like.

In another aspect, a molecular switch is provided which modulates the activity or expression of a molecular pathway molecule in a cell. FIG. 5B shows an example of a switch molecule comprising a pathway molecule which is conditionally active in the presence of a signal (schematically illustrated as “ ” in the Figure). The switch molecule is used to alter a cell signaling pathway, e.g., altering the expression and/or activity of downstream pathway molecules (turning such molecules ON or OFF, or altering the level of expression and/or activity of such molecules). In doing so, the switch molecule can be used to regulate the fate of one or more cells.

Similarly, the molecular switches according to the invention can be used to control metabolic pathways, e.g., providing a fusion molecule which provides an enzymatic activity coupled to the binding of a small molecule, or response to some other signal (as shown in FIG. 5F). Preferably, modulation of the enzyme activity in response to the signal, in turn, modulates the expression and/or activity of molecules downstream in the metabolic pathway.

More preferably, the states of the fusion molecules are coupled to a signal, such as the presence of an exogenous or endogenous binding molecules to which either the insertion sequence or acceptor sequence binds. The ability of the fusion molecule to control a pathway can be monitored by examining the expression and/or activity of pathway molecules which act downstream of a pathway molecule whose expression and/or activity is being modulated/controlled by the fusion molecule. Preferably, control of the pathway is coupled to the presence of the signal, e.g., binding of the fusion molecule to the exogenous or endogenous binding molecule, the presence of particular electrical or chemical properties of a cell, the presence or absence of particular wavelength(s) of light, and the like.

Pathways of interest include the phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase pathway, which is normally involved with hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate and which results in production of the secondary messengers inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate and diacylglycerol. Other pathways include, but are not limited to: a kinase pathway, a pathway involving a G protein coupled receptor, a glucerebrosidase-mediated pathway, a cylin pathway, an anaerobic or aerobic metabolic pathway, a blood clotting pathway, and the like.

In still another aspect, a fusion molecule is provided which delivers a bio-effective molecule (e.g., a drug, therapeutic agent, diagnostic or imaging agent, and the like) to a cell. In one scenario, shown in FIG. 5C, the fusion molecule comprises an insertion or acceptor sequence which binds to the bio-effective molecule, while the respective other portion of the fusion binds to a cellular marker that is a signature of a pathology, e.g., a small molecule, polypeptide, nucleic acid, metabolite, whose expression (presence or level) is associated with the pathology. Preferably, the fusion molecule releases the bio-effective molecule only in the presence of the marker of the pathology.

FIG. 5D shows an alternative method of transporting a bio-effective molecule. In this aspect, the insertion sequence or acceptor sequence comprises a transport sequence for transporting a bio-effective molecule bound to the fusion molecule intracellularly. Preferably, the insertion sequence and acceptor sequence are functionally coupled such that a conformational change in the transport sequence is coupled to intracellular release of the bio-effective agent. Successful delivery can be monitored by measuring the effect of the bio-effective agent (e.g., its ability to mediate a drug action or therapeutic effect, or to image a cell). More preferably, the conformation change occurs upon response of the respective other portion of the fusion to a signal (indicated schematically in the Figure as “ ”), enabling conditional intracellular transport of the bio-effective molecule. When the bio-effective agent is delivered to one or more cells in an organism, the effect of the agent on the physiological responses of the organism can be monitored, e.g., by observing clinical or therapeutic endpoints as is routine in the art. Where the bio-effective molecule is an imaging molecule, the localization of the bio-effective molecule in the organism can be monitored by MRI, X-ray, angiography, and the like.

In still another aspect, the invention provides a method for killing undesired cells, such as abnormally proliferating cells, e.g., cancer cells (FIG. 5E). For example, a fusion protein comprising a conditionally toxic molecule which targets to a cell having a pathology can be administered to a cell (or an organism comprising the cell). Preferably, the toxic state of the fusion protein is coupled to the response of the fusion protein to a signal, such as exposure to a marker of a pathology, causing the fusion protein to switch from a non-toxic state to a toxic state when it encounters the cell comprising the pathology. In one aspect, the change in state from a toxic to a non-toxic or less toxic molecule is coupled to binding of the fusion protein to the marker of the pathology.

In a further aspect, a fusion molecule is provided for regulating an activity of a nucleic acid regulatory sequence in vitro or in vivo. Activities which can be regulated include transcription, translation, replication, recombination, supercoiling, and the like (FIG. 5A). Preferably, fusion molecules are selected in which binding of the insertion sequence or acceptor sequence of the fusion molecule to the nucleic acid regulatory sequence is coupled to the response of the respective other sequence of the fusion molecule to a signal. Such fusion molecules can be used to create cells with conditional knockouts or knock-ins of a gene product whose expression is mediated by the activity of the nucleic acid regulatory sequence to which the fusion molecule binds, e.g., by providing or withdrawing the signal as appropriate. In one aspect, the signal is a drug or therapeutic agent. In another aspect, the signal is a change in pH, a change in cellular potential, or a change in exposure of a cell (and/or organism) to light. For example, a probe for delivering particular wavelengths of light can be used to provide a highly localized signal to a cell expressing a fusion molecule in vivo.

In still a further aspect, the fusion molecules according to the invention comprise sensor molecules that can be used to detect target analytes in vitro or in vivo (FIG. 5G). Target analytes include, but are not limited to: small molecules, metabolites, lipids, glycoproteins, carbohydrates, amino acids, peptides, polypeptides, proteins, antigens, nucleotides, nucleic acids, cells, cell organelles, and small organisms (e.g., microorganisms such as bacteria, yeast, protests, and the like).

The fusion molecule can be exposed to a target molecule in solution or stably associated with a solid support that can be exposed to a sample suspected of containing the target molecule. Alternatively, the fusion molecule can be expressed in a cell, i.e., for detecting intracellular or extracellular targets (for example, where the fusion molecule comprises an extracellular binding domain). Analyte present in the sample will bind to the fusion molecule, triggering production of a signal by the signaling portion of the molecule. Suitable signaling molecules from which this portion can be obtained include molecules capable of emitting light, e.g., such as GFP, or modified, or mutant forms thereof (e.g., EGFP, YFP, CFP, EYFP, ECFP, BFP, and the like). Other signaling molecules include electron transferring domains (e.g., such that the electrical characteristics of the fusion molecule can be monitored to provide a measure of target analyte), binding domains (e.g., domains capable of binding to a labeled molecule), and catalytic domains (e.g., β-lactamase, luciferase, alkaline phosphatase, and the like).

Signaling molecules which comprise catalytic domains can be detected by monitoring changes in the level of a fluorescent substrate. For example, when the catalytic domain is obtained from β-lactamase, fluorescent substrates such as CCF2/FA and CCF2/AM can be used (see, e.g., Zlokarnik, et al., Science 279: 84-88 (1998)).

In a further aspect, the invention provides a method for modulating a cellular response by conditionally providing a pair of fusion polypeptides to a cell to mediate the response. For example, the pair of fusion polypeptides can comprise a binding activity, an enzymatic activity, a signaling activity, a metabolic activity, and the like. In one aspect, the pair of fusion polypeptides modulate transcription, translation, or replication of the cell and/or alters a cellular phenotype in response to a signal

Host Cells for Expressing Fusion Molecules

Fusion molecules according to the invention can be expressed in a variety of host cells, including, but not limited to: prokaryotic cells (e.g., E. coli, Staphylococcus sp., Bacillus sp.); yeast cells (e.g., Saccharomyces sp.); insect cells; nematode cells; plant cells; amphibian cells (e.g., Xenopus); fish cells (e.g., zebrafish cells); avian cells; and mammalian cells (e.g., human cells, mouse cells, mammalian cell lines, primary cultured mammalian cells, such as from dissected tissues).

The molecules can be expressed in host cells isolated from an organism, host cells which are part of an organism, or host cells which are introduced into an organism. In one aspect, fusion molecules are expressed in host cells in vitro, e.g., in culture. In another aspect, fusion molecules are expressed in a transgenic organism (e.g., a transgenic mouse, rat, rabbit, pig, primate, etc.) that comprises somatic and/or germline cells comprising nucleic acids encoding the fusion molecules.

Fusion molecule also can be introduced into cells in vitro, and the cells (e.g., such as stem cells, hematopoietic cells, lymphocytes, and the like) can be introduced into the host organism. The cells may be heterologous or autologous with respect to the host organism. For example, cells can be obtained from the host organism, fusion molecules introduced into the cells in vitro, and then reintroduced into the host organism.

EXAMPLES

The invention will now be further illustrated with reference to the following examples. It will be appreciated that what follows is by way of example only and that modifications to detail may be made while still falling within the scope of the invention.

Example 1 Generating Fusion Molecules by Circular Permutation and Domain Insertion

This example describes a model system combining E. coli maltose binding protein (“MBP”) as the acceptor polypeptide sequence and the penicillin-hydrolyzing enzyme TEM1 β-lactamase (“BLA”) as the insertion polypeptide sequence. The BLA-MBP fusion molecule was chosen to demonstrate the circular permutation domain insertion strategy for producing molecular switches capable of coupling the functions of the two proteins. The desired property of the model switch is the ability to modulate β-lactamase activity through changes in maltose concentration. FIG. 1 is a schematic summary diagram of the cloning steps used in this Example.

Linkers for Circular Permutation

In order to circularly permute a gene it is generally necessary to include DNA that codes for a linker to link the original N- and C-termini We chose to test two different linkers. For the first (the “DKS linker”), β-lactamase was randomly circularly permuted by fusing the 5′- and 3′-ends with a DNA sequence coding for the tripeptide linker DKS, previously found in a combinatorial library of linkers to be most conducive for circularly permuting β-lactamase when the new N- and C-termini were located at a specific location (Osuna, Pérez-Blancas et al. 2002). For the second selected linker, (the “GSGGG linker”), the β-lactamase was randomly circularly permuted by fusing the 5′- and 3′-ends with a DNA sequence coding for the flexible pentapeptide linker GSGGG (SEQ ID NO:1)

Preparation of BLA Insert DNA

The β-lactamase gene fragment bla [24-286] (encoding amino acids 24-286) was selected for this study. DNA coding for amino acids 1-23 was not desired because it codes for the signal sequence that targets β-lactamase to the periplasm and is not part of the mature, active β-lactamase. The fragment was amplified by PCR from pBR322 such that it was flanked by EarI or BamHI restriction enzyme site sequences coding for the linkers described above and cloned into pGem T-vector (Promega) to create pBLA-CP(DKS) (FIG. 2) and pBLA-CP(GSGGG), (FIG. 3).

One hundred and thirty micrograms of pBLA-CP(GSGGG) was digested with 2000 units of BamHI and 140 micrograms of pBLA-CP(DKS) was digested with 600 units of EarI in the buffers and conditions recommended by the manufacturer of the restriction enzyme. The fragment containing the BLA gene was purified by agarose gel electrophoresis using the QIAquick™ gel purification kit. This DNA was treated with T4 DNA ligase under dilute concentrations to cyclize the DNA (18 hours at 16° C. with 600 Weiss units of T4 DNA ligase in the presence of 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 10 mM MgCl₂, 10 mM dithiothreitol, 1 mM ATP, 25 ug/ml BSA in a total volume of 5.1 ml). The ligation reaction was stopped by incubation at 65° C. for 20 minutes. The DNA was concentrated by vacufuge and desalted using the QIAquick™ PCR purification kit. Circular fragments were purified by agarose gel electrophoresis using the QIAquick™ gel purification kit.

The conditions for DNaseI digestion were determined experimentally by adding different amounts of DNaseI and analyzing the digested products by agarose gel electrophoresis. The digestion conditions were chosen such that a significant fraction of DNA was undigested in order maximize the amount of linear DNA that only had one double strand break. In general, approximately 1 milliunit of DNaseI per microgram of DNA (at a concentration 10 micrograms/ml) for an 8 minute digestion at 22° C. was found to be optimal. Sometimes more or less DNaseI was required and thus preferably for each library constructed the correct amount of DNaseI is determined experimentally by test digestions. The following conditions are a representative example. Six micrograms of circular DNA was digested with 6 milliunits of DNase I (Roche) for 8 minutes at 22° C. in the presence of 50 mM TrisHCl (pH 7.4), 1 mM MnCl₂ and 50 micrograms/ml BSA in 0.6 ml reaction volume. The reaction was stopped by adding EDTA to a concentration of 5 mM. The DNA was desalted using the QIAquick™ PCR purification kit and repaired by 6 units of T4 DNA polymerase and 6 Weiss Units of T4 DNA ligase at 12° C. for 15 minutes in the presence of 100 micromolar dNTP, 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 10 mM MgCl₂, mM dithiothreitol, 1 mM ATP and 25 ug/ml BSA. The repaired, linear DNA was purified by agarose gel electrophoresis using the QIAquick gel purification kit. This circularly permuted DNA was in a form ready for insertion into another plasmid.

Preparation of Target DNA for Random Domain Insertion Libraries

Forty μg of pDIM-C8-Mal was digested with DNaseI (0.01 units) for 8 minutes at 22° C. in the presence of 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, 10 mM MnCl₂ and 50 μg/ml BSA in a total volume of 1 ml. The reaction was quenched by the addition of EDTA to a concentration of 5 mM and the solution was desalted using four Qiaquick™ PCR purification columns into 200 μA elution buffer which was subsequently concentrated by vacufuge. Nicks and gaps were repaired by incubating at 12° C. for 1 hour in a total volume of 120 μl in the presence of T4 DNA polymerase (15 units) and T4 DNA ligase (12 Weiss units) in the presence of 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 10 mM MgCl₂, 10 mM DTT, 1 mM ATP, 25 μg/ml BSA and 125 μM dNTPs. The reaction was stopped by incubating at 80° C. for 10 minutes. Sodium chloride was added to 100 mM and the DNA was dephosphorylated by adding alkaline phosphatase (60 units) and incubating at 37° C. for 1 hour. The DNA was desalted as before and the linear DNA (corresponding to the randomly linearized pDIM-C8-Mal) was isolated from circular forms of the plasmid by agarose gel electrophoresis using the Qiaquick gel purification kit.

Preparation of Target DNA for Site-Specific Insertion Libraries

Referring to FIG. 4, plasmid pDIM-C8-Mal was modified using overlap extension (Horton, Hunt et al. 1989) to be suitable for insertion of the circularly permuted BLA at two specific sites: (a) between MBP [1-165] and MBP [164-370] and (b) at the C-terminus of MBP. The plasmids were modified in analogous ways. The modifications for insertion between MBP [1-165] and MBP [164-370] to create plasmid pDIMC8-MBP(164-165) are described below and shown in FIG. 4. Two inverted SapI sites were inserted between DNA coding for MBP [1-165] and MBP [164-370] in such a manner that digestion with SapI and subsequent filling in of the resulting overhangs using Klenow polymerase in the presence of dNTPs results in a perfectly blunt MBP [1-165] on one side and a perfectly blunt MBP [164-370] on the other side. This is achieved by virtue of the fact that SapI is a type IIS restriction enzyme that cuts outside of its recognition sequence. Other type IIS restriction enzymes could have been used. Non-type IIS restriction enzymes could also be used if it is acceptable to have their recognition site as part of the gene fragment that is being inserted into.

Three micrograms of pDIMC8-MBP(164-165) was digested with 6 units of SapI at 37° C. in the presence of 50 mM potassium acetate, 20 mM Tris-acetate, 10 mM magnesium acetate, 1 mM dithiothreitol (pH 7.9), 100 ug/ml BSA for 2.5 hours. The DNA was desalted using the QIAquick™ PCR purification kit and repaired with 5 units of Klenow at 25° C. for 20 minutes in the presence of 33 micromolar dNTPs, 100 mM NaCl, 50 mM Tris-HCl, 10 mM MgCl₂ and 1 mM dithiothreitol (pH 7.9). The enzyme was heat inactivated by incubation at 75° C. for 20 minutes. Sodium chloride was added to 100 mM and ten units of Calf Intestinal Phosphatase was added and the solution was incubated for 1 hour at 37° C. Dephosphorylation was performed to prevent recircularization of the vector without receiving an insert in the subsequent ligation step. The vector DNA was purified by agarose gel electrophoresis using the QIAquick™ gel purification kit.

Ligation of Inserts into Target DNA

Insert DNA (85 ng) comprising the circularly permuted BLA was ligated to the prepared target DNA (100 ng) at 22° C. overnight in the presence of T4 DNA ligase (30 Weiss units) and the ligase buffer provided by the manufacturer in a total volume of 13 μl. After ethanol precipitation, 10% of the ligase-treated DNA was electroporated into 50 μl Electromax™ DH5α-E electrocompetent cells (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif.). Transformed cells were plated on large (248 mm×248 mm) LB agar plate supplemented with 50 μg/ml chloramphenicol (Cm). The naïve domain insertion library was recovered from the large plate (Ostermeier, Nixon et al. 1999) and stored in frozen aliquots.

Screening for Allosteric Enzymes

The libraries were diluted from frozen aliquots and plated on LB plates containing different concentrations of ampicillin (Tables 1 and 2). A number of colonies were picked (Tables 3) and grown in LB overnight in 96 well plates (0.5 ml/well) in the presence of 1 mM IPTG and 50 μg/ml Cm.

TABLE 1 Library Statistics. Number of Number Increase in Library library of unique velocity (of size (Number members Number of switches nitrocefin of that can colonies found hydrolysis in transformants grow on 50 screened for with ≧2- presence of Insertion site Linker in with BLA ug/m1 AMP switching fold maltose) of in MBP BLA insert). (see Table 2) (see Table 3) effect* best switch 164-165 DKS 0.44 × 10⁶ 515 848 2   +97% GSGGG 1.05 × 10⁶ 361 1248 1  −250% C-terminus DKS 1.03 × 10⁶ 2414 576 0 GSGGG 0.30 × 10⁶ 1615 1920 1-4  +234% random DKS 0.41 × 10⁶ 191 384 0 GSGGG 1.20 × 10⁶ 1156 3312 5 +1650% *≧2-fold change in velocity of nitrocefin hydrolysis in the presence of 5 mM maltose.

TABLE 2 Number of Library Members Capable of Grow on Plates with Ampicillin (With or Without Maltose). Ampi- T164- T164- cillin Maltose? 165 165 EE EE Random Random (μg/ml) (5 mM) DKS GSGGG DKS GSGGG DKS GSGGG 5 no 734 878 7052 3510 nd 2458 50 no 394 294 1747 1159 nd 783 200 no 220 nd 1080 298 nd nd 1000 no nd 74 nd nd nd 60 5 yes 1098 761 8354 4056 nd 1969 50 yes 515 361 2414 1615 191 1156 200 yes 182 240 1525 630 nd 272 1000 yes nd 88 nd nd nd 34

TABLE 3 Number of Library Members Screened (Picked from Plates with  Indicated Ampicillin and Maltose Levels). Ampicillin Maltose? T164-165 T164-165 EE EE Random Random (μg/ml) (5 mM) DKS GSGGG DKS GSGGG DKS GSGGG 5 no — 96 — 288 — 96 50 no — — — — — — 200 no — — — — 480 — 1000 no — — — — — — 5 yes 96 192 864 — 768 — 50 yes 672 576 576 768 384 960 200 yes 80 384 — — — 1008 1000 yes — — — — — — EE = end-to-end (insertion at C-terminus)

Next, 50 μl of PopCulture (Novagen) and 2.5 unit of benzonase nuclease was added to each well and incubated for 15 minutes at room temperature to lyse the cells. The cells debris and any unlysed cells were pelleted by centrifugation and supernatant was recovered. In 96-well format, 60 μA of lysate was assayed for hydrolysis of nitrocefin (50 μM) by monitoring the increase in absorbance at 490 nm in 100 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0, both with and without 5 mM maltose. Any lysate in which there was a difference in rate of more than 2-fold (between with and without maltose) was selected for retesting and further investigation.

Confirmation and Identification of Positives

Library members identified as having more than 200% switching activity in the 96-well plate screen were grown 24-48 hours in 100 ml LB media in 500 ml shaker flasks at 22° C. without IPTG. The cells were pelleted and resuspended in 8 ml assay buffer (100 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0) and lysed by French press. The soluble fraction of this lysate was assayed for hydrolysis of nitrocefin (50 μM) at 22° C. as previously described (Guntas and Ostermeier 2004) both with and without 5 mM maltose. Initial rates were determined from absorbance at 486 nm monitored as a function of time. The enzyme was incubated at the assay temperature in the absence or presence of 5 mM maltose for four minutes prior to performing the assay. All assays contained 100 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0. Library members for which there was a difference in the initial rate of more than about 2-fold were sequenced (Table 4). Switches RG-5-169 and RG-200-13 were also assayed in the presence of 5 mM sucrose or 5 mM glucose. Neither sugar affected the velocity of nitrocefin hydrolysis, indicating that the switching effect was specific for maltose, a ligand to which MBP binds.

TABLE 4 Switching Effect of Selected BLA-MBP Molecular Switches. Switching Switch Sequence effect* IFG-5-277 MBP[1-165]-BLA[218-286]-GSGGG- −250% BLA[24-215]-MBP[164-370] IFD-5-7 MBP[1-165]-BLA[110-286]-DKS- +96% BLA[24-107]-MBP[164-370] IFD-5-15 MBP[1-165]-BLA[168-286]-DKS- +97% BLA[24-170]-MBP[164-370] EEG-50-530 MBP[1-370]-BLA[114-286]-GSGGG- +228% BLA[24-112]-GSQQH EEG-50-251 MBP[1-370]-BLA[114-286]-GSGGG- +234% BLA[24-114]-K RG-5-169 MBP[1-338]-BLA[34-286]-GSGGG- +855% BLA[24-29]-MBP[337-370] RG-200-13 MBP[1-316]-BLA[227-286]-GSGGG- +1650% BLA[24-226]-S-MBP[319-370] *Percent change in velocity of nitrocefin hydrolysis (50 μM nitrocefin) in the presence of 5 mM maltose in 100 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0.

Analysis of Purified Switch RG-200-13

A 6×His tag was added to the C-terminus of RG-200-13 (also termed “RG13” in Examples below) and the fusion was purified as previously described (Guntas and Ostermeier 2004). The protein was purified to approximately 60% purity. The kinetic constants and binding constants were determined from Eadie-Hofstee plots and Eadie plot equivalents, respectively, using a spectrophotometric assay for nitrocefin hydrolysis. Initial rates for nitrocefin hydrolysis were determined from absorbance at 486 nm monitored as a function of time. The enzyme was incubated at the assay temperature in the absence or presence of saccharide for four minutes prior to performing the assay. All assays contained 100 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0. The dissociation constant for maltose was determined using change in velocity of nitrocefin hydrolysis as a signal.

Only sugars known to bind to MBP had an effect on nitrocefin hydrolysis (Table 5). Those sugars that produce a large conformational change upon binding MBP (Quiocho, Spurlino et al. 1997) (maltose and maltotriose) produced the largest change in the velocity of nitrocefin hydrolysis. Beta-cyclodextrin, which produces a small conformational change upon binding MBP (Evenas, Tugarinov et al. 2001), has a small effect. The effect of maltotetraitol is intermediate, consistent with the fact that maltotetraitol-binding to MBP results in a mixture of open and closed structures (Duan, Hall et al. 2001).

TABLE 5 Sugar Dependence of Switching Effect of RG-200-13*. Change in velocity of nitrocefin hydrolysis in Sugar Binds to MBP? presence of sugar Sucrose No −5% Lactose No −4% Galactose No −3% Maltose Yes +1800% Maltotriose Yes +1700% Maltotetraitol Yes +400% β-cyclodextrin Yes +150% *50 μM nitrocefin, 100 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0, 22° C., 5 mM sugar except for β-cyclodextrin (3 mM).

The kinetic parameters of RG-200-13 are reported in Table 6. The kinetic parameters of RG-200-13 at 22° C. in the presence of maltose (k_(cat)=˜520 s⁻¹; K_(m)=˜85 M) are very similar to previously reported values for TEM-1 β-lactamase at 30° C. (k_(cat)=930 s⁻¹; K_(m)=52 μM) (Raquet, Lamotte-Brasseur et al. 1994) indicating that RG-200-13 is essentially a fully functional TEM-1 β-lactamase in the presence of maltose. The k_(cat)/K_(m) in the presence of 5 mM maltose is approximately 25-fold higher than in the absence of maltose. The K_(d) for maltose binding to RG-200-13 at 22° C. was ˜5 μM, similar to the K_(d) previously reported for maltose binding to MBP (1-1.5 μM) (Schwartz, Kellermann et al. 1976).

TABLE 6 Kinetic Parameters of Nitrocefin Hydrolysis of RG-200-13 Molecular Switch. k_(cat) (s⁻¹) K_(m) (μM) No No mal- 5 mM mal- 5 mM k_(cat)/K_(m) Substrate tose maltose Ratio^(a) tose maltose Ratio^(a) Ratio^(a) nitrocefin ~80 ~520 ~6.5 ~325 ~85 ~0.26 ~25 ^(a)(with maltose)/(without maltose). Conditions: 100 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0, 22° C.

The effect of 5 mM maltose on other substrates of BLA is shown in Table 7. Maltose binding had the largest effect on cephalothin (of the substrates tested), with the velocity of cephalothin hydrolysis being 32-fold higher in the presence of maltose than in its absence. Based on the effects on other substrates, the actual switching effect on k_(cat)/K_(m) for cephalothin is likely to be much higher than 32-fold.

TABLE 7 Effect of Maltose on Other Substrates of Switch RG-200-13. Approximate fold increase Substrate K_(m) for in velocity of nitrocefin concen- TEM-1 β- hydrolysis in the presence Substrate tration lactamase^(a) of 5 mM maltose cephalothin 250 μM 246 μM  32 ampicillin 100 μM 32 μM 26 500 μM 10 benzylpenicillin 100 μM 19 μM 17 500 μM 7 carbenicillin  1 mM ? 4 oxacillin  1 mM  3 μM 5 Conditions: 100 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0, 22° C. ^(a)(Raquet, Lamotte-Brasseur et al. 1994)

The fact that the magnitude of the switching effect of RG-200-13 is dependent on substrate identity and concentration strongly argues that maltose is converting the protein from a less active to a more active conformation. If an alternative explanation, i.e., that maltose affects the equilibrium between unfolded (inactive) and folded (active) forms of the protein were true, the observed switching effect would be independent of the substrate being tested and independent of substrate concentration, which was not the case.

Example 2 Construction and Characterization of a Molecular Switches Created by In Vitro Recombination of Non-Homologous Genes

This example describes further studies of exemplary molecular switches comprising BLA-MBP fusions made by the methods of the invention.

Materials and Methods

All restriction enzymes, T4 DNA ligase, T4 DNA polymerase, and calf intestinal phosphatase were purchased from New England Biolabs (Beverly, Mass.). pGEM T-vector cloning kit and Taq polymerase were purchased from Promega (Madison, Wis.). DNAseI was purchased from Roche Biochemicals (Indianapolis, Ind.). Qiaquick™ PCR purification kit and Qiaquick gel extraction kit were purchased from Qiagen (Valencia, Calif.). Popculture reagent, rLysozyme, benzonase nuclease, and His-tag protein purification kit were purchased from Novagen (Madison, Wis.). Oligonucleotides and Electromax™ DH5α-E electrocompetent cells were purchased from Invitrogen (Carlsbad, Calif.). Nitrocefin was purchased from Oxoid (Hampshire, UK). Maltotriose and β-cyclodextrin were purchased from Sigma (St. Louis, Mo.). Antibiotics, maltose, lactose, galactose and sucrose were purchased from Fisher Scientific (Pittsburgh, Pa.).

Random Circular Permutation

The portion of the bla gene encoding the mature BLA was fused to a sequence coding for a GSGGG linker and containing a BamHI site by PCR amplification using the forward primer:

(SEQ ID NO: 24) 5′-TGCC GGATCCGGCGGTGGCCACCCAGAAACGCTGGTG-3′ and the reverse primer (SEQ ID NO: 25) 5′-GTCTGA GGATCC CCAATGCTTAATCAGTGA-3′.

Portions of the primers encoding the GSGGG linker are underlined and the BamHI site is highlighted in bold. The PCR product was desalted using Qiaquick PCR purification kit and ligated to the pGEM T-vector to create plasmid pGEMT-BLA. One hundred and fifty μg of pGEMT-BLA was digested with 1000 units of BamHI and the DNA fragment that encodes BLA was gel purified using Qiaquick gel purification kit. Eighteen μg of this DNA was cyclized by ligation at 16° C. for 18 hours in a reaction volume of 5.1 ml in the presence of ligase buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, 10 mM MgCl₂, 10 mM DTT, 1 mM ATP, 25 μg/ml BSA pH 7.5) and 600 Weiss units of T4 DNA ligase. After heat inactivation of the ligase, the concentrated reaction mixture was desalted and the circular DNA was purified by agarose gel electrophoresis using Qiaquick Gel Extraction kit.

To introduce the random double stranded break, 8 μg of circular DNA was digested with 8 milliunits of DNAse I in the presence of 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, 10 mM MnCl₂ and 50 μg/ml BSA in a total volume of 0.8 ml for 8 minutes. The reaction was quenched by the addition of EDTA to a concentration of 5 mM and the solution was desalted using a Qiaquick PCR purification column. Nicks and gaps were repaired by incubating at 12° C. for 30 minutes in a total volume of 90 μl in the presence of T4 DNA polymerase (6 units) and T4 DNA ligase (12 Weiss units) in the presence of 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 10 mM MgCl₂, 10 mM DTT, 1 mM ATP, 25 μg/ml BSA and 125 μM dNTPs. The DNA was desalted as before and the linear DNA (corresponding to the randomly circularly permuted bla) was isolated from circular forms by agarose gel electrophoresis using the Qiaquick gel purification kit.

Random Domain Insertion

Plasmid pDIM-C8MalE has the malE gene encoding MBP under the IPTG inducible tac promoter. Introduction of a random double stranded breaks (one per molecule of pDIM-C8MalE) was performed as described (Spencer et al. 1993). One hundred ng of randomly linearized plasmid pDIMC8-MalE was ligated to 85 ng of randomly circularly permuted BLA fragment (5:1 insert/vector molar ratio) in a reaction volume of 15 μl. The ligation was carried out at 22° C. overnight in the presence of ligase buffer and 45 Weiss units T4 DNA ligase. After ethanol precipitation, the ligated DNA was transformed into Electromax DH5α-E electrocompetent cells by performing ten electroporations of 40 μl cells each. Cells were plated on two 245×245 mm LB agar plates supplemented with 50 μg/ml chloramphenicol and incubated at 37° C. overnight. The naïve library was recovered from the large plates and stored in frozen aliquots as described (Picard 2000).

Library Selection and Screening

The naïve library was plated on LB agar plates supplemented with 200 μg/ml ampicillin and 50 mM maltose and incubated at 37° C. overnight. From these plates, 1056 colonies were picked to inoculate 1 ml LB media (supplemented with 50 μg/ml chloramphenicol and 1 mM IPTG) in 96-well format. After incubation overnight at 37° C., each culture was lysed using 0.1 ml Popculture reagent, 40 units of rLysozyme, and 2.5 units of benzonase nuclease. Lysates were centrifuged to pellet the insoluble material and the soluble fractions were assayed in 96-well format for nitrocefin hydrolysis in the presence or absence of 5 mM maltose using a colorimetric assay for nitrocefin hydrolysis (Posey et al. 2002). The assays were carried out at room temperature using the Spectramax-384 Plus microplate reader (Molecular Devices) in the presence of 100 mM sodium phosphate buffer and 50 μM nitrocefin in a 200 μl reaction volume. Clones whose lysates exhibited a greater than 2-fold increase in the rate of nitrocefin hydrolysis were recultured and their lysates assayed again to verify the effect.

Protein Modifications and Mutagenesis

A GGSGH₉ sequence was appended to the sequence of RG13 by PCR amplification with the appropriate primers. The PCR product was cloned between NdeI and XhoI sites of pET24b (Novagen) to create pET24b-RG13. Mutations I329W and A96W were introduced into pET24b-RG13 by a combination of overlap extension PCR and Quickchange mutagenesis.

Protein Purification

One liter LB media containing 50 μg/ml kanamycin was inoculated with 2% overnight culture and shaken at 37° C. The culture was induced with 1 mM IPTG when the OD₆₀₀ reached 0.5 and incubated at 22° C. for 16 hours. Pelleted cells were resuspended in 20 ml binding buffer supplied by the His-tag protein purification kit (Novagen, Madison, Wis.) and lysed by French press. The soluble fraction was recovered and the protein was purified using the protein purification kit. Eluted protein was dialyzed at 4° C. against three liters of 100 mM sodium chloride, 50 mM sodium phosphate buffer overnight followed by dialysis against one liter of the same buffer with 20% glycerol for four hours. Protein was stored in aliquots at −80° C. Fusion proteins RG13 and RG13(I329W) were purified as described above. To improve the yield of RG13(A96W/I329W), 10 mM maltose was added to the culture at induction. RG13(A96W/I329W) was dialyzed more extensively after purification and complete removal of maltose was verified by enzymatic assay on successive rounds of dialysis in the presence and absence of maltose. The purities of the proteins were estimated by Coomassie blue staining of SDS-PAGE gels. The purities of RG13, RG13(I329W), and RG13(A96W/I329W) were greater than 98%, 95% and 97%, respectively. The extinction coefficients of RG13, RG13(I329W), and RG13(A96W/I329W) at 280 nm were calculated (Saghatelian et al. 2003) to be 126,000; 120,500 and 116,100 Abs M⁻¹ cm⁻¹, respectively.

Steady State Kinetics

All kinetic assays were performed at 25° C. in the presence of 100 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0. Ten μl of enzyme stock was added to 1.59 ml buffer (containing the saccharide, if desired). After incubation for 30 seconds, 0.4 ml of 5× substrate was added and the absorbance at the appropriate wavelength was recorded using the Cary50 UV-VIS spectrophotometer. The wavelength monitored was 486 nm, 240 nm, and 232 nm for nitrocefin, carbenicillin, and ampicillin respectively. From the initial rate of reaction the kinetic constants were determined using Eadie-Hofstee plots. In the absence of maltose, the time course of the reaction for RG13, RG13(I329W), and RG13(A96W/I329W) displayed a slight lag in the reaction rate that became more pronounced at higher substrate concentrations. The rate data was consistent with a small hysteretic effect (Brennan et al. 1994) and not substrate inhibition as preincubation of the enzyme with the substrate for one minute prevented the lag from occurring upon addition of more substrate. Therefore, the steady state parameters for nitrocefin hydrolysis in the absence of maltose were determined by measuring the rate at 1-2 minutes (well after the lag) and correcting the substrate concentration by subtracting the amount of substrate hydrolyzed. In all cases the extent of reaction at the point the rate was measured was less than 25%. In the presence of maltose, no lag was observed.

Maltose Affinity

Maltose affinity for RG13 (in presence and absence of 10 mM carbenicillin) and RG13(I329W) (in the absence of substrate) was determined using intrinsic protein fluorescence measured on a Photon Technology QuantaMaster QM-4 spectrofluorometer. Fluorescence spectra were obtained at 25° C. at different concentrations of maltose in 50 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0, containing 100 mM sodium chloride. The protein concentration was 50-100 nM. Excitation was at 280 nm. The quenching in fluorescence intensity at 341 nm caused by maltose was used in Eadie-Hofstee equivalent plots to determine K_(d) using the following equation:

${\Delta \; F} = {{\Delta \; F_{\max}} - {K_{d}\frac{\Delta \; F}{\lbrack L\rbrack}}}$

where ΔF is the change in fluorescence intensity, ΔF_(max) is the difference in fluorescence between no maltose and saturating amounts of maltose and [L] is the maltose concentration. The fluorescence quenching of RG13(I329W/A96W) upon addition of maltose was insufficient to accurately determine a K_(d) by this method. The dissociation constant for maltose and RG13(I329W) in the presence of saturating carbenicillin (2 mM) was determined by measuring the initial rate of carbenicillin hydrolysis as a function of maltose concentration. The apparent dissociation constant in the presence of subsaturating concentrations of nitrocefin (25 μM) for all three proteins was determined by measuring the initial rate of nitrocefin hydrolysis as a function of maltose concentration.

In Vivo Characterization of Switches

Overnight inoculums of DH5α-E cells expressing RG13, BLA or BLA(W208G) were diluted into LB media and plated on LB plates, either in the absence or presence of 50 μM maltose, in the presence of increasing amounts of ampicillin. Ampicillin was present in the plates at the following concentrations: 0, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, and 2000 μg/ml. Cells were plated at approximately 1000 CFU (no antibiotic) per plate. The plates were incubated at 37° C. for 20 hours. The minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) was defined as the lowest ampicillin concentration at which no colonies were present, or that at which the number of colonies present was <1% of the number of colonies at the next lowest level of ampicillin.

Characterization of BLA-MBP Molecular Switches

As discussed, the approach to construction of a model molecular switch involved recombination of the genes encoding TEM-1 β-lactamase (BLA) and the E. coli maltose binding protein (MBP). BLA and MBP lack any sequence, structural or functional relationship except for the fact that they are periplasmic proteins of bacterial origin. BLA is a monomeric enzyme that hydrolyzes the amide bond of the β-lactam ring of β-lactam antibiotics. The presence of maltose has no effect on wild type BLA enzymatic activity, with or without the presence of an equimolar amount of MBP (Guntas et al. 2004). MBP is a member of the periplasmic binding protein superfamily and is involved in chemotactic response and the transport of maltodextrins. MBP consists of a single polypeptide chain that folds into two domains connected by a hinge region. The single binding site for maltose is at the interface of these two domains. In the absence of maltose, MBP exists in an open form. Maltose-binding is concomitant with a 35° bending motion about the hinge resulting in the closed form of the protein (Sharff et al. 1992).

We sought to create a molecular switch by combining BLA and MBP in such a manner that the rate of β-lactam hydrolysis was coupled to maltose binding and maltose concentration. We reasoned that in such a switch the conformational change in the MBP domain upon maltose binding would propagate to the active site of the BLA domain and alter its catalytic properties, a mechanism analogous to natural allosteric effects.

The fragment of the BLA gene coding for the mature protein was circularly permuted in a random fashion (Graf et al. 1996; Ostermeier et al. 2001) and subsequently randomly inserted into a plasmid containing the E. coli malE gene that codes for MBP. FIG. 6A is a schematic diagram showing the strategy used to make the molecular switch. More particularly, FIG. 6A shows that the fragment of the BLA gene coding for the mature protein (codons 24-286) is flanked by sequences coding for a GSGGG linker (each of which contains a BamHI site). The fragment is excised by digestion with BamHI and cyclized by ligation under dilute DNA concentrations. A single, randomly-located double strand break is introduced by DNaseI digestion to create the circularly permuted library. This library is randomly inserted into plasmid pDIMC8-MBP containing the MBP gene (malE) under control of the tac promoter (tacP/O). The site for insertion in pDIMC8-MBP is created by introduction of a randomly located double-stranded break by digestion with dilute concentrations of DNaseI.

For the random circular permutation of bla [24-286], we fused the 5′ and 3′ ends by an oligonucleotide sequence that would result in a GSGGG flexible peptide linker between the original N- and C-termini of the protein. This linker was designed to be of sufficient length to connect the termini without perturbing BLA structure.

Statistical analysis on the resulting library indicated that a minimum of 27,000 members contained a circularly permuted bla[24-286] inserted into malE in the correct orientation with both fusion points in-frame with malE. Approximately 0.33% of these members were able to form colonies on rich media plates containing 200 μg/ml ampicillin and 50 mM maltose. These library members were screened in 96-well format for a maltose dependence on β-lactamase activity using a colorimetric assay for nitrocefin hydrolysis.

We identified one protein (RG13; FIG. 6B) in which the initial velocity of nitrocefin hydrolysis (at 50 μM nitrocefin) increased by 17-fold in the presence of maltose. FIG. 6B is a schematic illustration of the sequence of the RG13 switch. The numbers in parentheses indicate the amino acid number of the starting proteins. The numbering system for MBP does not include the signal sequence. The numbering system for BLA does include the signal sequence and does not follow the consensus numbering system for β-lactamases.

Referring to FIG. 6C, it was determined that in RG13, the BLA was circularly permuted in a loop that precedes a β-sheet that lines the active site of the enzyme. The circular permuted BLA was inserted at the beginning of an α-helix of MBP such that two MBP residues were deleted. More particularly, FIG. 6C shows structures of maltose-bound MBP (Quicho et al. 1997) and BLA bound to an active-site inhibitor (Maveyraud et al. 1996) oriented such that the fusion sites in RG13 are proximal.

Using purified RG13, we confirmed that the increase in catalytic activity occurred only in the presence of sugars that are known to bind and induce a conformational change in MBP (FIG. 7). FIG. 7A shows the percent increase in the initial velocity of nitrocefin hydrolysis at 20 μM nitrocefin upon addition 5 mM of the indicated ligands (maltose, maltotriose and β-cyclodextrin) and non-ligands (sucrose, lactose and galactose). It is seen that sugars known to induce a large conformational change (Quicho et al. 1997) (i.e., maltose and maltotriose; 35° closure angle) produced a 15- to 20-fold increase in the rate of nitrocefin hydrolysis. β-cyclodextrin, which only induces a 10° hinge bending motion in MBP (Evenas et al. 2001), increased the rate 2-fold. Non-ligands such as sucrose, lactose and galactose had no effect.

We next determined that the switching was reversible (i.e., upon removing maltose, the activity returned to its pre-maltose level). This was first demonstrated by competing bound maltose off RG13 using β-cyclodextrin (FIG. 7B). FIG. 7B shows reversible switching using the competing ligand. During the enzymatic hydrolysis of nitrocefin, formation of product was monitored by absorbance at 486 nm. At time zero the reaction was started in 2 ml phosphate buffer (0.1M) with 20 μM nitrocefin and 2.5 nM RG13. At the time indicated by the first arrow, 20 μl of 1M maltose was added resulting in a 10-fold increase in the reaction rate. This maltose concentration is above the K_(d) for maltose but is subsaturating. At the time indicated by the second arrow, 230 μl of 10 mM β-cyclodextrin was added (final concentrations are 1.0 mM β-cyclodextrin and 8.9 μM maltose). Because RG13 has similar affinities for maltose and β-cyclodextrin but β-cyclodextrin is present at a >100-fold higher concentration, the β-cyclodextrin preferentially replaces the maltose bound to RG13 and the rate of reaction decreases to a level consistent with β-cyclodextrin's modest effect on nitrocefin hydrolysis.

Reversibility of the switch was also demonstrated by subjecting RG13 to repeated rounds of dialysis and addition of maltose to cycle between low and high levels of enzymatic activity. FIG. 7C shows reversible switching after dialysis. The initial rate of nitrocefin hydrolysis at 25 μM nitrocefin was measured at the indicated steps. Maltose was added to a final concentration of 5 mM.

This demonstrated reversibility is one of the features that differentiates our approach from methods such as conditional protein splicing (Mootz et al. 2002; Buskirk et al. 2004) that produce non-reversible switches that control the production of active protein rather than activity of the protein per se.

From steady state kinetics experiments, we determined the Michaelis-Menten parameters of RG13 for nitrocefin hydrolysis at 25° C. in the absence and presence of maltose. In the absence of maltose, the catalytic constants were k_(cat)=200±40 s⁻¹ and K_(m)=550±120 μM. With the addition of saturating amounts of maltose, k_(cat) increased 3-fold and K_(m) decreased 8-fold, resulting in a 25-fold increase in k_(cat)/K_(m). The kinetic constants of RG13 in the presence of saturating concentrations of maltose (k_(cat)=620±60 s⁻¹ and K_(m)=68±4 μM) were comparable to that previously reported for BLA at 24° C. (k_(at)=900 s⁻¹ and K_(m)=110 μM (Sigal et al. 1984)). This finding shows that RG13 is a very active TEM1 β-lactamase in the presence of maltose. RG13 has exhibited switching behavior with all seven BLA substrate tested to date including ampicillin (16-fold rate increase at 50 μM ampicillin) and carbenicillin (12-fold rate increase at 50 μM carbenicillin).

The increase in k_(cat) indicates that maltose binding affects the catalytic steps. However, since K_(m) is a combination of the rate constants for substrate binding as well as catalysis (Christensen et al. 1990), K_(m) could not be directly used to ascertain the effect of maltose on substrate binding. Instead, the effect of maltose on substrate binding was determined indirectly by measuring the effect of substrate on maltose binding using intrinsic protein fluorescence. These studies suggested that RG13 undergoes a conformational change much like MBP does upon maltodextrin binding, since maltose-induced quenching of total fluorescence (−10%) and shifting of the maximum fluorescence wavelength (i.e., a 1.5 nm red-shift for maltose and a 4 nm blue-shift for β-cyclodextrin) were similar to that previously reported for MBP (Hall et al. 1997). The presence of saturating amounts of the substrate carbenicillin decreased the dissociation constant of maltose and RG13 from 5.5±0.5 μM to 1.3±0.5 μM. Thus, maltose binding must decrease the dissociation constant of carbenicillin and RG13 by the same factor (FIG. 7).

FIG. 8 is a schematic diagram depicting coupling of ligand and substrate binding. More particularly, FIG. 8 shows that the change in free energy upon protein (P) binding ligand (L) and substrate (S) is the same whether the ligand or substrate binds first. Adding the free energy changes of the two different paths from L+P+S to LPS, it is seen that: ΔG_(L)+ΔG_(S) ^(L)=ΔG_(S)+ΔG_(L) ^(S) since the total free energy change is path independent. By rearranging this equation to: ΔG_(L)−ΔG_(L) ^(S)=ΔG_(S)−ΔG_(S) ^(L) it is seen that the left hand side represents the effect that the presence of bound substrate has on ligand binding and the right hand side represents the effect that the presence of bound ligand has on substrate binding. The effects must be equal. This corresponds to a coupling energy of approximately 1 kcal/mol. Without intending to be bound by theory, this observation offers an additional explanation for the increase in β-lactam hydrolysis in the presence of maltose: a positive heterotropic allosteric effect on substrate binding.

Presumably, the BLA domain of the apo, open form of RG13 exists in a compromised, less active conformation. In the ligand-bound state, the BLA domain exists in a more normal, active conformation. We sought to determine the state of the BLA domain in the process of closing. We investigated at what closure angle the catalytic properties of RG13 improved To address these questions, we took advantage of mutations in the hinge region of MBP that manipulate the conformational equilibria between the open and closed state (Marvin et al. 2001). Residual dipolar couplings have been used to establish that the apo forms of these mutants are partially closed relative to the apo wildtype MBP with the ensemble average closure angles being 9.5° and 28.4° for I329W and I329W/A96W, respectively (Millet et al. 2003). The ligand-bound closed forms of MBP, i.e., MBP(I329W) and MBP(I329W/A96W) have closure angles of 35°. Partial closing shifts the equilibrium towards the ligand-bound state and thus the mutations increase the affinity for maltose (Marvin et al. 2001).

Introduction of these mutations into RG13 resulted in the creation of more sensitive switches—i.e., switches that respond to lower concentrations of maltose (FIG. 9). FIG. 9A shows dissociation constants for maltose determined in the absence (white bars) and presence (black bars) of saturating concentrations of carbenicillin. The apparent dissociation constants in the presence of subsaturating concentrations (25 μM) of nitrocefin (grey bars) were also determined. The dissociation constants for maltose of MBP, MBP(I329W), MBP(I329W/A96W) (dashed line) reported by Marvin and Helling a (2001) are shown for comparison (FIG. 9A).

Without intending to be bound by theory, the fact that we observed qualitatively similar changes in maltose affinity when the mutations are introduced into RG13 strongly suggests that the relative order and magnitude of the angles of closure of RG13, RG13(I329W) and RG13(I329W/A96W) are similar to that of MBP, MBP(I329W) and MBP(I329W/A96W). Thus, the apo forms of the two RG13 mutants offer conformations intermediate between the open to the closed form of RG13—conformations that may reflect that of RG13 in the process of closing. Assuming that the process of closing in RG13 passes through the conformations of the apo forms of the two RG13 mutants, kinetic characterization of RG13(I329W) and RG13(I329W/A96W) suggested that the initial stages of closing do not result in changes in the BLA domain that substantially affect catalysis.

FIGS. 9B-D show steady state kinetic parameters of nitrocefin hydrolysis for RG13, RG13(I329W) and RG13(I329W/A96W) in the presence (black bars) or absence (white bars) of saturating concentrations of maltose. Experimental conditions were as follows: 100 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0, 25° C. Both k_(cat) and K_(m) improved during the intermediate stages of closing, but the majority of the effect on K_(m) occurred during the final stages of closing.

As the magnitude of the allosteric effect was on the same order as that of many natural allosteric enzymes, we next examined the biological effects of RG13. We found that the switching activity was sufficient to result in an observable phenotype: maltose-dependent resistance to ampicillin (Table 8). E. coli cells expressing RG13 had a minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) for ampicillin that was increased four-fold in the presence of 50 μM maltose. In contrast, the addition of the same concentration of sucrose or glucose to a plate did not affect the MIC (Table 8). Thus, RG13 serves to couple the previously unrelated functions of ampicillin

TABLE 8 Ampicillin Resistance of E. coli Cells in the Presence and Absence of Maltose. Minimum Inhibitory Concentration of Expressed Ampicillin (μg/ml)* Protein No maltose 50 μM maltose none 4 4 RG13 128 512 BLA(W208G)† 32 32 BLA ≧2000 ≧2000 *Conditions: DH5α-E cells on LB plates (with or without maltose) incubated at 37° C. for 20 hours. †A mutant of BLA with reduced activity. resistance and maltose concentration. E. coli cells expressing RG13 function as a growth/no growth sensor for maltose.

We have shown herein that two unrelated proteins can be systematically recombined in order to link their respective functions and create molecular switches. A combination of random circular permutation and random domain insertion enabled the creation of a MBP-BLA fusion geometry in which conformational changes induced upon maltose binding could propagate to the active site of BLA and increase BLA enzymatic activity up to 25-fold. The functional coupling of two proteins with no evolutionary or functional relationship is a powerful strategy for engineering novel molecular function. For example, coupling a ligand-binding protein and a protein with good signal transduction properties would result in the creation of a molecular sensor for the ligand. Furthermore, switches that establish connections between cellular components with no previous relationship can result in novel cellular circuitry and phenotypes. As discussed above, we expect such switches to establish connections between molecular signatures of disease (e.g., abnormal concentrations of proteins, metabolites, signaling or other molecules) and functions that serve to treat the disease (e.g., delivery of drugs, modulation of signaling pathways or modulation of gene expression) and therefore possess selective therapeutic properties.

Example 3 Design Considerations and Properties of Molecular Switches

This Example describes design considerations, kinetic properties and characteristics of families of molecular switches that can be constructed according to the methods of the invention.

Molecular switch RG13, described above, has a dissociation constant for maltose of about 5-6 μM in the absence of a BLA substrate. In the presence of saturating amounts of the substrate carbenicillin, the dissociation constant for maltose decreases to about 1 μM. This shows that the binding of maltose and substrate (carbenicillin) are coupled. The coupling energy is on the order of 1 kcal/mol. This is consistent with a decrease in K_(m) for nitrocefin in the presence of maltose (See Tables 9 and 10, supra)

Switches Responding to a Range of Signal Concentrations

It is believed that a switch is most useful if the range of the concentration of the signal (maltose, in the case of RG13) overlaps with the range of signal concentration that the dependent function responds to. When a ligand-binding protein is used as the signal detector and the ligand is the signal, the latter range corresponds approximately to the range 0.1K_(d)−10 K_(d), where K_(d) is the dissociation constant of the switch and the signal. This can be seen from the following example.

In the case of RG13, the velocity of nitrocefin hydrolysis is the dependent function. The velocity (v) of nitrocefin hydrolysis depends on the steady state kinetic parameters by the Michaelis-Menten (Equation 1).

$\begin{matrix} {v = \frac{{\lbrack E\rbrack_{0}\lbrack S\rbrack}k_{cat}}{K_{m} + \lbrack S\rbrack}} & (1) \end{matrix}$

where [E]₀ is the concentration of the switch, [S] is the concentration of nitrocefin and k_(at) and K_(m) are the Michaelis-Menten kinetic parameters. In the absence of maltose, the velocity is found by Equation 2

$\begin{matrix} {v^{-} = \frac{{\lbrack E\rbrack_{0}\lbrack S\rbrack}k_{cat}^{-}}{K_{m}^{-} + \lbrack S\rbrack}} & (2) \end{matrix}$

where the superscript “−” designates that the parameters are those when maltose is not bound to the switch. In the presence of saturating concentrations of maltose (i.e. maltose is bound to all switches; this occurs at very high concentrations of maltose relative to the dissociation constant K_(d) for maltose), the velocity is found by Equation 3:

$\begin{matrix} {v^{+} = \frac{{\lbrack E\rbrack_{0}\lbrack S\rbrack}k_{cat}^{+}}{K_{m}^{+} + \lbrack S\rbrack}} & (3) \end{matrix}$

where the superscript “+” designates that the parameters are those when maltose is bound to the switch. At intermediate concentrations of maltose, the velocity depends on the fraction of switches that have maltose bound. If we make the approximation that the small cooperative effect of maltose- and substrate-binding can be ignored, the fraction F of switches that are bound to maltose can be found by Equation 4:

$\begin{matrix} {F = \frac{\lbrack M\rbrack}{\left\lbrack K_{d} \right\rbrack + \lbrack M\rbrack}} & (4) \end{matrix}$

where [M] is the concentration of maltose. The velocity of nitrocefin hydrolysis is thus found by Equation 5:

$\begin{matrix} {v = {{F\frac{{\lbrack E\rbrack_{0}\lbrack S\rbrack}k_{cat}^{+}}{K_{m}^{+} + \lbrack S\rbrack}} + {\left( {1 - F} \right)\frac{{\lbrack E\rbrack_{0}\lbrack S\rbrack}k_{cat}^{-}}{K_{m}^{-} + \lbrack S\rbrack}}}} & (5) \end{matrix}$

Equation 5 is true for all concentrations of maltose as it reduces to Equations 2 and 3 in the limiting cases of no maltose bound and saturating maltose, respectively. The fold-increase in the rate of nitrocefin velocity Z is found by dividing the right hand side of Equation 5 by the velocity in the absence of maltose to get Equation 6:

$\begin{matrix} {Z = {{F\frac{k_{cat}^{+}\left( {K_{m}^{-} + \lbrack S\rbrack} \right)}{k_{cat}^{-}\left( {K_{m}^{+} + \lbrack S\rbrack} \right)}} + \left( {1 - F} \right)}} & (6) \end{matrix}$

Referring to FIG. 10, Equation 6 is plotted for the case of RG13 hydrolysis of 25 μM nitrocefin using a range of different dissociation constants for maltose. More particularly, FIG. 10 shows the fold increase in velocity of switch RG13 with different dissociation concentrations (K_(d)) for maltose. The concentration of nitrocefin was 25 μM. The kinetic parameters of RG13 with and without maltose are those shown in Table 9. Equation 6 was used to generate the curves. It is apparent that the velocity is changing most in the range of one order of magnitude higher or lower than the dissociation constant for maltose. The switch is expected to have the largest change in the dependent function if the concentration of the signal (maltose in the case of RG13) changes within this range or changes through this range. Thus, it is desirable for the application of molecular switches to create switches with different affinities for the signal so as to be useful for different concentration ranges of the signal.

Altering Affinity for Signals

Exemplary switches were created by the method having different affinities for maltose. For example switch RG-5-169 (sequence MBP[1-338]-BLA[34-286]-GSGGG-BLA[24-29]-MBP[337-370] was created having a K_(d) for maltose (>1 mM) that is much greater than that of RG13 for maltose (1-5 μM).

The affinity of switches for effectors (signals) can also be altered by a variety of methods, including rational design and directed evolution methods. As long as the resulting altered-affinity switch maintains a conformational change upon binding the effector that results in changes the dependent function, switching will be maintained. For example, mutations known to alter the affinity of the ligand recognition domain (for RG13 this is MBP) can be introduced into the switch to create switches with altered affinity for the ligand. These mutations consist of those that make direct contact with the ligand, those that make contact with residues that make direct contact with the ligand and those that are more distal from the binding site pocket.

For instance, as discussed in Example 2, mutations have been made in the hinge region of MBP that manipulate the conformational equilibria between the open and closed state (Marvin and Helling a 2001). Residual dipolar couplings have been used to establish that the apo forms of these mutants are partially closed relative to the apo wildtype MBP with the closure angles being 9.5° and 28.4° for I329W and A96W/I329W, respectively (the ligand-bound closed form of MBP has a closure angle of 35°) (Millet, Hudson et al. 2003). Because partial closing shifts the equilibrium towards the ligand-bound state, the I329W mutation results in about a 20-fold increase in affinity for maltose and the A96W/I329W double mutant results in a 60-fold increase in the affinity for maltose compared to wildtype MBP at 25° C. (Marvin and Helling a 2001). The affinities of MBP, MBP(I329W) and MBP(I329W/A96W) are 800 nM, 35 nM and 13 nM, respectively.

Introduction of the above MBP mutations into RG13 resulted in mutants with increased affinity for maltose (Table 9) while still maintaining switching behavior (Table 10). In addition, the level of activity in the presence of saturating amounts of maltose (the “on” state) was not affected by the mutations (Table 10).

TABLE 9 Maltose Affinity of RG13-Based Molecular Switches. K_(d) maltose (μM)^(a) Saturating Carbenicillin No 25 μM Enzymatic Protein Ligand Substrate^(b) nitrocefin^(c) IPF^(b) assay^(d) RG13 maltose 5.5 ± 0.5 6.7 ± 0.03 1.3 ± 0.5 0.9 ± 0.1 RG13 maltose 0.55 ± 0.13 1.0 ± 0.04 nd 0.11 ± 0.01 I329W RG13 maltose nd 0.17 ± 0.02  nd nd I329W/ A96W ^(a)Conditions: 100 mM NaCl, 50 mM NaPO₄, pH 7.0, 25° C. ^(b)Determined by measuring intrinsic protein fluorescence (IPF) as a function of maltose concentration. When using IPF at saturating carbenicillin, a concentration of 10 mM carbenicillin was used. ^(c)Determined by measuring the initial rate of nitrocefin hydrolysis as a function of maltose concentration. 25 μM nitrocefin is well below the K_(m) of nitrocefin. Thus, most molecules of RG13 will not have nitrocefin bound and the effective K_(d) that is measured is close to what it would be in the absence of substrate. ^(d)Determined by measuring the initial rate of carbenicillin hydrolysis as a function of maltose concentration. A concentration of 1.5 mM carbenicillin was used, which is well above the K_(m) of carbenicillin. Thus, most molecules of RG13 will have carbenicillin bound and the K_(d) that is measured is in the presence of bound substrate (carbenicillin).

TABLE 10 Kinetic Parameters of Nitrocefin Hydrolysis^(a) of RG13-Based Molecular Switches. k_(cat) K_(m) k_(cat)/K_(m) ^(a) k_(cat)/K_(m) Protein Effector k_(cat) (s⁻¹)^(a) Ratio^(b) K_(m) (μM)^(a) Ratio^(b) (s⁻¹ μM⁻¹) Ratio^(b) RG13 — 200 ± 40 —  550 ± 120 0.37 ± 0.10 RG13 I329W — 190 ± 30 — 350 ± 60 0.54 ± 0.11 RG13 — 360 ± 40 — 260 ± 40 1.4 ± 0.3 I329W/A96W RG13 maltose 620 ± 30 3.1 ± 0.6 68 ± 4 0.12 ± 0.03 9.2 ± 0.7 25 ± 7  RG13 I329W maltose 590 ± 50 3.1 ± 0.5 53 ± 7 0.15 ± 0.03 11.0 ± 1.8  20 ± 5  RG13 maltose 530 ± 20 1.5 ± 0.2 60 ± 4 0.23 ± 0.04 8.9 ± 0.8 6.4 ± 1.3 I329W/A96W RG13 β-cyclo^(c) 590 ± 60 2.9 ± 0.6 870 ± 90 1.6 ± 0.4 0.67 ± 0.10 1.8 ± 0.6 ^(a)Conditions: 100 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0, 25° C.; concentration of effector is 5 mM ^(b)(with effector)/(without effector). ^(c)β-cyclodextrin

From a practical standpoint, the increase in maltose affinity of these hinge mutants indicates that ligand-affinity of RG13 can be systematically changed to create molecular switches that respond to different concentration ranges of effector while still maintaining switching ability and high activity in the presence of the effector. By increasing the affinity for maltose one increases the sensitivity of the switch (i.e., it will switch to a higher level of activity at lower concentrations of maltose). Combinations of these affinity-altered switches are expected to behave as a composite switch with a high dynamic range.

Example 4 Modified Molecular Switches with Altered Signal Recognition

The invention further encompasses methods to alter the specificity of the signal recognition domain so that it recognizes other signals. This allows for the construction of “modified” molecular switches in which the dependent function responds to new signals without the need to construct entirely new molecular switches. For the example of RG13, in which the signal binding domain is the maltose binding protein, these methods can change the ligand to which the switch binds. This would allow the construction of molecular switches in which BLA activity could be modulated by different ligands. In one aspect of the method, the identity of the signal to which the switch responds is altered by introducing mutations into existing switches. For example, mutations in the signal recognition domain already known to alter the ligand-binding specificity can be introduced into the switch to create switches that respond to new ligands. For instance, Helling a and colleagues have computationally designed periplasmic binding proteins with radically altered binding specificities (Looger, Dwyer et al. 2003) including designing MBP to bind Zn²⁺ (Marvin and Helling a 2001) instead of maltose. MBP binds maltose with high affinity (K_(d)=0.8 μM) but does not bind Zn²⁺. MBP with the A* set of mutations (A63H/R66H/Y155E/W340E) has high affinity for Zn²⁺ (K_(d)=5.1 μM) and does not bind maltose (Marvin and Helling a 2001). Accordingly, introduction of the A* set of mutations into a fusion such as RG13 may result in a switch that responds to Zn²⁺ but not maltose.

The signal recognition domain can be altered by rational design or directed evolution to bind to new effectors. With respect to testing mutations predicted by rational design or screening or selecting libraries created for a directed evolution approach, existing switches are used to efficiently test or select for binding to new ligands in vivo. For example, E. coli cells expressing the MBP-BLA switch RG13 from the lac promoter on pDIMC8 have a higher MIC for ampicillin (Amp) in the presence of maltose than in their absence (Table 11) because the BLA enzymatic activity of RG13 (hydrolysis of ampicillin) is higher in the presence of maltose. Thus, for example, mutations created in RG13 (either by rational design or by a stochastic or semi-stochastic method) such that mutant forms of RG13 bind another ligand X (and behave as a switch) can be screened or selected for in vivo. E. coli producing such a new switch will grow at 200 μg/ml Amp in the presence of X but not in the absence of X.

TABLE 11 Minimum Inhibitory Concentration of Ampicillin for E. coli Cells Expressing RG13^(a). MIC ampicillin Supplement to plate (μg/ml) none 100 50 μM maltose 400  5 mM maltose 400 ^(a)conditions: LB plates, 37° C., supplemented with maltose as indicated. Approximately 1000 colony forming units (without ampicillin) per plate. Concentrations of ampicillin tested: 0, 25, 50, 100, 200, 400 and 800 μg/ml.

Ligands that bind to the signal recognition domain in a different manner have different switching ability. This is demonstrated by the fact that β-cyclodextrin, which is known to bind to MBP but with a different conformational change (Skrynnikov, Goto et al. 2000; Hwang, Skrynnikov et al. 2001), changes the activity of the RG13 switch in a different manner than maltose (see Table 10).

Example 5 Creation of Libraries Containing Families of Molecular Switches

This example describes several strategies, including use of iterative approaches, for producing various types of libraries that contain families of related molecular switches.

Materials and Methods MBP-BLA Library Constructions

Random domain insertion and random circular permutation of the bla gene were performed generally as described in Examples above. Libraries designated 2-5 and 7 (having inserts at a particular site in the MBP gene) were constructed as shown schematically in FIG. 11. (See also FIGS. 2 and 3 supra for details on construction of the circular bla gene, and FIG. 4 for details on preparation of the MBP-containing plasmid.) FIG. 12 is a schematic diagram showing the construction of Library 6, in which a specific circular permuted version of bla was randomly inserted into the plasmid containing the MBP gene. (See also FIG. 1, left side).

MBP-BLA Library Selection and Screening

Libraries were plated on LB plates containing 5 mM maltose at the indicated concentrations of ampicillin and incubated at 37° C. overnight. From these plates, colonies were picked to inoculate 1 ml LB media (supplemented with 50 μg/ml chloramphenicol and 1 mM IPTG) in 96-well format. Lysates from these cultures were assayed for nitrocefin hydrolysis activity in the presence and absence of maltose as described above.

Protein Characterization

His-tagged proteins were purified as described in Examples above. All enzymatic assays were performed in the presence of 100 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0. Enzyme stock was added to 1.9 ml buffer (containing the saccharide, if desired). After incubation at the desired temperature for 5 minutes, 0.1 ml of 20× substrate was added and the absorbance at the appropriate wavelength was recorded using the Cary50 UV-VIS spectrophotometer. The wavelengths monitored were as follows: nitrocefin (486 nm), carbenicillin (240 nm), ampicillin (235 nm), cefazolin (260 nm), cefotaxime (260 nm), and cephalothin (260 nm). Ligand affinity was determined as described above. The oligomeric state of MBP317-347 was determined by analysis of size exclusion chromatography data using a pre-packed column of superose 6 (Pharmacia, Pscataway, N.J.) with a separation range of 5-5000 kDa on a Pharmacia FPLC system. The mobile phase was phosphate buffer at pH 7.0 (0.1M sodium phosphate, 0.15 M NaCl) with or without 5 mM maltose and flow rate was set at 0.5 ml/min Elution peaks were detected by UV absorbance at 254 nm. The column was calibrated using ribonuclease A (13.7 kD), albumin (67 kD), aldolase (158 kD), catalase (232 kD) as molecular weight standards.

Characteristics of Libraries

Libraries 2-7 were plated on different levels of ampicillin in the presence of 50 mM maltose. Colonies that grew were used to inoculate 96-well plates. The resulting cultures were lysed and assayed at room temperature for nitrocefin hydrolysis in the presence and absence of maltose in 96-well format. Library members in which the addition of maltose resulted in a 2-fold or greater difference in the rate of nitrocefin hydrolysis were chosen for further study. Statistics on all libraries and screening can are shown in Tables 12-14.

TABLE 12 Library Statistics for Libraries 2-7. Library size (number of Library transformants with bla insert). Library 2 (T164-165/DKS) 0.44 × 10⁶ Library 3 (T164-165/GSGGG) 1.05 × 10⁶ Library 4 (EE/DKS) 1.03 × 10⁶ Library 5 (EE/GSGGG) 0.30 × 10⁶ Library 6 0.75 × 10⁶ Library 7 1.16 × 10⁶

Table 13 shows the number of library members that could grow on plates containing different amounts of maltose and ampicillin. Based in part on this information, colonies from different plates were screened.

TABLE 13 Number of Original Transformants Capable of Growth In Presence of Ampicillin Number of original transformants that could grow on . . . No Maltose 50 mM maltose Library Amp5 Amp50 Amp200 Amp1000 Amp5 Amp50 Amp200 Amp1000 2 734 394 220 — 1098 515 182 — 3 878 294 — 74 761 361 240 88 4 7052 1747 1080  — 8354 2414 1525 — 5 3510 1159 298 — 4056 1615 630 — 6 — 3138 383 64 — 4439 765 65 7 — 2008 990 138  — 1806 1337 275 

The number of colonies screened from plates containing different amounts of maltose and ampicillin is shown in Table 14. Colonies were screened as described in the Methods section. For Libraries 2-5, all switches originated from plates with 50 mM maltose and 5 μg/ml ampicillin. For Libraries 6 and 7, all switches originated from plates with 50 mM maltose and 200 μg/ml ampicillin.

TABLE 14 Number of Colonies Screened. Number of colonies screened from plates containing . . . No Maltose 50 mM maltose Library Amp5 Amp50 Amp200 Amp1000 Amp5 Amp50 Amp200 Amp1000 2 — — — —  96 672  80 — 3  96 — — — 192 576 384 — 4 — — — — — 576 — — 5 288 — — — 864 768 — — 6 — — — — — — 576 192 7 — — — — — — 1056  —

Molecular Switches Isolated from BLA-MBP Libraries 2-7

FIG. 13 is a schematic depiction of the library construction schemes for Libraries 2-7, and of particular switches identified from these libraries. The arrowheads indicate the sites of insertion. Multiple arrowheads on one gene indicate random insertion sites. Dashed arrows indicate a particular switch on which successive libraries were based. The magnitude of switching was determined on the soluble fraction of cell lysates at room temperature using 50 μM nitrocefin. For switches with a rate increase in the presence of maltose, the ratio is of “with maltose” to “without maltose” (indicated by no sign in front of the value). For switches with a rate decrease with maltose, the rate is of “without maltose” to “with maltose” (indicated by a negative sign in front of the value).

Referring to FIG. 13, five new switches were identified with improved switching activity, including one (designated IFG277) in which maltose was a negative effector. Another switch (designated IFD15) was permuted such that residues 168-170 of BLA were tandemly duplicated. Residues 168-170 are part of the Ω-loop associated with the active site of the enzyme that includes a key catalytic residue, Glu166. IFD15 was not a better switch than the other four identified from these libraries. However, the fact that BLA could be permuted so near the active site without elimination of activity, combined with the notion that a connection between BLA and MBP near the active site of BLA would be more likely to produce switches with superior properties, led us to choose this particular circular permutation of the bla gene for Library 6.

Library 6 contained this particular circularly permuted variation of bla randomly inserted into the gene for MBP (FIGS. 12, 13). From this library several new switches were identified, including BLA168-89 in which 22 residues near the C-terminus of MBP were deleted. However, the best switches found had BLA inserted in the region between residues 316 to 320. BLA168-81, whose catalytic activity increased almost two orders of magnitude in the presence of maltose, had the circular permuted BLA inserted in place of residue 317 of MBP. Interestingly, RG13 also consists of an insertion in place of residue 317, but with a different circular permutation of BLA.

To exhaustively explore insertions of circular permuted variants of BLA that replace residue 317 of MBP, Library 7 was constructed. For selecting library members from Library 7 for further examination, a criterion of 30-fold or better difference in catalytic activity with maltose was selected. Three switches with sequences very similar to BLA168-81 were identified from Library 7 (FIG. 13).

Characterization of Switches

A 10×-His tag was added to the C-terminus of switches MBP317-347, MBP317-639 and BLA168-81 and the proteins were purified to >95% purity via nickel-affinity chromatography. The enzymatic activity of the switches was characterized using the colorimetric substrate nitrocefin (FIG. 14). FIG. 14A shows hydrolysis of 80 μM nitrocefin by 27 nM MBP317-347 in the presence and absence of maltose at 25° C. More particularly, the reaction was started by the addition of nitrocefin at time zero to samples lacking (solid lines) or containing (dashed line) 5 mM maltose. For the reaction traced by the solid grey line, 5 mM maltose was added to the reaction at about 6 minutes. As can be seen in FIG. 14A, the rate of nitrocefin hydrolysis was profoundly affected by maltose. Only sugars known to bind MBP were effectors; sucrose, galactose and lactose had no effect on the rate of hydrolysis.

In none of the three switches did enzymatic activity obeyed Michaelis-Menten kinetics. In the absence of maltose, catalysis was characterized by a small burst lasting on the order of several minutes followed by a slower steady state rate (FIG. 14B). FIG. 14B shows the same data as FIG. 14A with a narrower range of absorbance shown. The grey line is the background rate of nitrocefin hydrolysis in the absence of enzyme. The size of the burst was much greater than 1 mol product/mol of enzyme and was consistent with a branched pathway mechanism involving substrate induced progressive inactivation (Waley, S. G., 1991). Such kinetics have been observed previously in class A β-lactamases on substrates with bulky side chain substituents (Citri et al., 1976) that orient towards the Ω-loop (Chen et al., 1993; Strynadka et al., 1992) as well as in mutants of Staphylococcus aureus PC1 β-lactamase in which the Ω-loop has been perturbed (Chen et al., 1999). Similar burst kinetics were seen in the presence of maltose; thus substrate-induced inactivation cannot be an explanation for the compromised activity in the absence of maltose.

Preliminary characterization indicated that switch MBP317-347 had the largest switching activity, and this switch was characterized in more detail. In order to get an effective measure of the difference in catalytic activity between with and without maltose, the amount of time necessary to convert half of the substrate to product was characterized as a function of switch concentration and nitrocefin concentration (FIG. 14C). Because the catalytic activities with and without maltose differed so greatly, there was only a limited protein concentration range in which both activities could be measured. In this range, the amount of time necessary to convert half the substrate to product was 240-590 times greater in the absence of maltose than in its presence. More particularly, FIG. 13C shows the time necessary for MBP317-347 to convert half of the nitrocefin to product at 25° C. as a function of nitrocefin concentration, maltose and MBP317-347 concentration. Squares indicate 5 μM nitrocefin; circles indicate 100 μM nitrocefin; filled symbols indicate with maltose; open symbols indicate without maltose.

Referring to FIG. 14D, it was seen that the effect of temperature and substrate on switching activity was complex, with no clear trend. FIG. 14D shows the ratio of time necessary for MBP317-347 to convert half of substrate to product in the absence of maltose to that in the presence of maltose as a function of substrate and temperature. White bars indicate 25° C.; black bars indicate 37° C. Concentrations of MBP317-347/concentration of substrate are: ampicillin (113 nM/200 μM), carbenicillin, (453 nM/200 μM), cefazolin (113 nM/200 μM), cefotaxime (453 nM/100 μM), cephalothin (226 nM/150 μM), and nitrocefin (22.6 nM/100 μM) Interestingly, the effect of switching the temperature from 25 to 37° C. was a uniform ˜2-fold decrease in activity in the presence of maltose, whereas the effect in the absence of maltose ranged from a 3.5-fold increase to a 23-fold decrease in activity.

The oligomeric state of switch MBP317-347 at 25° C. was investigated using size exclusion chromatography. This analysis was consistent with a monomer-dimer equilibrium with a dissociation constant of about 5 μM in the absence of maltose and about 20 μM in the presence of maltose. The importance of the dimerization and its minor maltose-dependence to the switching activity is likely minimal—the difference in activity between with and without maltose does not have a significant dependence on protein concentration (FIG. 14C) and all the protein concentrations assayed are well-below the dissociation constant of the dimer.

Example 6 Creation of Molecular Switches Binding Novel Ligands

Creation of Ligand-binding Site Library in MBP317-347 (Library SB3)

A library of variants of MBP317-347 was constructed in which each of the codons coding for the five positions (D14, K₁₅, W62, E111, and W230) was completely random. Five sets of primers (in which the above codons were varied as 5′-NNK-3′) were used to amplify fragments of the MBP317-347 gene. Sequences of primers for creating Library SB3 are as shown.

Primer set #1 DIMC8Malfor (SEQ ID NO:) 5′-GGACCAGGATCCATGAAAATAAAAACAGGT-3′ MBP1415rev (SEQ ID NO: 26) 5′-GCCGTTAATCCAGATTAC-3′ Primer set #2 MBP1415for (SEQ ID NO: 27) 5′-GTAATCTGGATTAAGGCNNKNNKGGCTATAACGGTCTCGCT-3′ MBP62rev (SEQ ID NO: 28) 5′-GAAGATAATGTCAGGGCC-3′ Primer set #3 MBP62for (SEQ ID NO: 29) 5′-GGCCCTGACATTATCTTCNNKGCACACGACCGCTTTGGT-3′ MBP111rev (SEQ ID NO: 30) 5′-AACAGCGATCGGGTAAGC-3′ Primer set #4 MBP111for (SEQ ID NO: 31) 5′-GCTTACCCGATCGCTGTTNNKGCGTTATCGCTGATTTAT-3′ MBP230rev (SEQ ID NO: 32) 5′-CGGGCCGTTGATGGTCAT-3′ Primer set #5 MBP230for (SEQ ID NO: 33) 5′-ATGACCATCAACGGCCCGNNKGCATGGTCCAACATCGAC-3′ DIMC8Malback (SEQ ID NO: 34) 5′-ATCCGGACTAGTAGGCCTTTACTTGGTGATACGAGT-3′

These fragments were assembled into a full gene by overlap extension PCR in a single PCR reaction. The assembled gene library was inserted between the BamHI and SpeI sites of pDIM-C8 to create a library of 1.58×10⁷ transformants

Selection and Screening of Library SB3

The library was plated on LB plates containing 256 μg/ml ampicillin and various amounts of sucrose as shown in Table 15. The number of transformants in the original library that could grow under these conditions was determined by the product of frequency of colonies that grew and the number of transformants in the library (1.575×10⁷). Individual colonies were screened as described in the Methods section for the MBP-BLA libraries except that sucrose was used instead of maltose. The number of colonies screened from the different plate types is shown in Table 15.

TABLE 15 Analysis of Library BS3. Sucrose on plate Quantity none 0.5 mM 5 mM 50 mM Transformants that can grow 220 255 372 >886 on 256 μg/ml Amp Colonies screened — 369 46 170

Switch MBP317-347, described above, conferred upon E. coli cells a maltose-dependent ampicillin resistance phenotype. The MIC at 37° C. for cells plated on media containing 5 mM maltose was 512 μg/ml, which was four-fold higher than the MIC on plates lacking maltose. Other sugars, including sucrose, had no effect on the MIC. The only four-fold difference in MIC was somewhat surprising considering the much large effect of maltose on β-lactam hydrolysis in vitro.

Switch MBP317-347 connects the presence of a ligand (i.e., maltose) to a growth/no growth phenotype when cells producing MBP317-347 are plated on β-lactam antibiotics. We sought to exploit this phenotype to create switches that respond to new effectors (FIG. 15). We reasoned that if the maltose-binding site of the switch was altered such that it bound a new ligand, and if binding of this new ligand induced a similar conformational change in the switch, then the β-lactamase activity of the switch would increase to a higher level of activity. Thus, from a library in which the maltose-binding site of the switch was randomized, one could select for those members that bound a new ligand by plating in the presence of the new ligand on plates containing a level of β-lactam antibiotic that was not permissive for growth in the absence of the old ligand. We also predicted that once mutations necessary to convert the maltose switch into one for the new ligand were identified, introduction of these mutations into MBP would result in a binding protein for the new ligand (FIG. 15).

This was tested by attempting to convert MBP317-347 into a switch that responds to sucrose. Maltose is a disaccharide of glucose whereas sucrose is a disaccharide of glucose and fructose. Neither MBP nor MBP317-347 show any detectable binding of sucrose (K_(d)>>50 mM). By inspection of the crystal structure of MBP bound to maltose, we identified five residues proximal to the glucose that is replaced with fructose in sucrose: D14, K₁₅, W62, E111, and W230. A library of variants of MBP317-347, in which each of the five positions was randomized using 5′-NNK-3′ for each codon, was created by overlap extension that consisted of 1.58×10⁷ transformants (with a theoretical degeneracy on the protein level of 4.08×10⁶). This library was plated at 37° C. in the presence of 256 μg/ml ampicillin and increasing concentrations of sucrose.

In the absence of sucrose, the frequency of library members that grew was ˜1.6×10⁻⁵. We speculate that these false positives result from mutations that increase the production of the switch or alleviate the deficiency in ampicillin hydrolysis in the absence of bound ligand. The frequency of colonies on plates with 500 μM sucrose was not statistically different than that on plates with no maltose. However the frequencies of colonies growing at 5 mM and 50 mM sucrose were ˜2.6×10⁻⁵ and >6×10⁻⁵, respectively.

Colonies (arising from the first library) from plates containing 256 μg/ml ampicillin containing 500 μM sucrose or 50 mM sucrose were used to inoculate 96-well plates. Lysates of these cultures were screened (using the 96-well nitrocefin assay) for those members for which the rate of nitrocefin hydrolysis increased in the presence of 5 mM sucrose. Two library members (designated 5-7 and 6-47) were found to respond to sucrose from the 500 μM sucrose plate (Table 15). Many library members that grew on the 50 mM sucrose plate were found to respond to sucrose. These were further screened for those that responded to lower levels of sucrose resulting in the identification of two more sucrose switches (designated 1-59 and 1-68).

TABLE 16 Sequences, Ligand Affinity and Switching Activity of Engineered Proteins. K_(d) for ligand (μM) at 25° C. in presence of Amino acid number No substrate^(a) 5 μM nitrocefin^(b) Protein 14 15 62 111 230 Sucrose Maltose Sucrose Maltose Switching^(c) MBP317- D K W E W nb^(d) 0.5 ± 0.1 nb^(d)  1.9 ± 0.2 240  347 5-7 L F Y Y W 0.7 ± 0.1 23 ± 13  6.7 ± 0.2 35 ± 5 82 6-47 L Q Y Q W — — 220 ± 10  3.2 ± 0.3 91 1-59^(e) K E Y R W — — 340 ± 20 44 ± 2 28 1-68^(e) L E Y R W — — — — 32 SBP(5-7) L F Y Y W 6.6 ± 0.6 24 ± 4  n/a n/a n/a MBP D K W E W nb^(d) 1 n/a n/a n/a Abbreviations; nb, no binding; n/a, not applicable ^(a)Dissociation constants determined by change in intrinsic protein fluorescence as a function of ligand concentration (Hall et al., 1997). ^(b)Apparent dissociation constants in the presence of nitrocefin were calculated using change in initial rates of nitrocefin hydrolysis as a function of ligand concentration². ^(c)Ratio (without ligand to with ligand) of time necessary to hydrolyze one-half of the substrate (100 μM nitrocefin; 25° C.; 20 nM protein; saturating ligand concentration). The ligand used was sucrose except maltose was used for MBP317-347. For 1-59 and 1-68, ligand affinity and switching was determined in the soluble fraction of cell lysates, so the exact protein concentration is unknown. ^(d)No binding can be detected. K_(d) >> 50 mM. ^(e)characterized in the soluble fraction of cell lysates

Characterization of Sucrose Switches

A 10×-His tag was added to the C-terminus of switches 5-7 and 6-47, described above, and the proteins were purified to >95% purity via nickel-affinity chromatography. The binding to sucrose and to maltose was characterized by two different methods. Intrinsic protein fluorescence (Hall et al., 1997) was used to directly determine a K_(d) for the ligand. Switch 6-47 showed too little change in fluorescence upon incubation with sucrose or maltose, presumably in part due to the W62Y mutation. An apparent K_(d) was estimated using the effect of the ligand on the initial rate of nitrocefin hydrolysis (Guntas et al., 2004). This was performed at both low and high substrate to illustrate how the presence of bound nitrocefin has a negative effect on ligand binding; thus, the presence of bound ligand has a negative effect on substrate binding. Since sucrose-binding results in an increase in catalytic activity, large increases in the rates of the catalytic steps in the presence of sucrose must compensate for the decreased substrate affinity.

All of the switches still retained significant maltose affinity, with 5-7 being the switch with both the highest affinity for sucrose (K_(d)=0.7 μM) and the highest specificity for sucrose over maltose (33-fold higher affinity for sucrose). No binding or switching in response to lactose or galactose was observed. Sucrose and maltose increased β-lactamase activity of by equal amounts. However, the switching magnitude (ratio of activity with and without maltose) was less than that observed in the parental maltose switch MBP317-347. The reasons for this were examined in 5-7. In the absence of either sucrose or maltose, 5-7's activity was about 3-fold higher than MBP317-347's. The measured activity of 5-7 and MBP317-347 in the presence of bound ligand did not differ significantly. This suggests that the apo form of 5-7 is less compromised than MBP317-347 in nitrocefin hydrolysis activity and that the conformation of 5-7 bound to maltose or sucrose is the same—at least as far as its effect on 5-7's β-lactamase activity.

Creation of a Sucrose Binding Protein (SBP)

The D14L, K₁₅F, W62Y and E111Y mutations of sucrose switch 5-7 were introduced into a His-tag version of MBP to create SBP. SBP was purified to >95% purity via nickel-affinity chromatography. The affinity of SBP for maltose was the same as that of sucrose switch 5-7 but the affinity for sucrose was decreased by about 10-fold. Still, SBP maintained a 4-fold preference for sucrose. The conversion of MBP to SBP represents a >>10⁶ conversion in binding specificity.

Example 7 Exemplary Molecular Switches

This example provides nucleic acid and amino acid sequences of several exemplary molecular switches according to the invention.

Switch BLA168-81: Nucleic Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 35) atgaaaataaaaacaggtgcacgcatcctcgcattatccgcattaacgacgatgatgttttccgcctcggctctcgccaaaat cgaagaaggtaaactggtaatctggattaacggcgataaaggctataacggtctcgctgaagtcggtaagaaattcgagaa agataccggaattaaagtcaccgttgagcatccggataaactggaagagaaattcccacaggttgcggcaactggcgatg gccctgacattatcttctgggcacacgaccgctttggtggctacgctcaatctggcctgttggctgaaatcaccccggacaa agcgttccaggacaagctgtatccgtttacctgggatgccgtacgttacaacggcaagctgattgcttacccgatcgctgttg aagcgttatcgctgatttataacaaagatctgctgccgaacccgccaaaaacctgggaagagatcccggcgctggataaag aactgaaagcgaaaggtaagagcgcgctgatgttcaacctgcaagaaccgtacttcacctggccgctgattgctgctgacg ggggttatgcgttcaagtatgaaaacggcaagtacgacattaaagacgtgggcgtggataacgctggcgcgaaagcggg tctgaccttcctggttgacctgattaaaaacaaacacatgaatgcagacaccgattactccatcgcagaagctgcctttaataa aggcgaaacagcgatgaccatcaacggcccgtgggcatggtccaacatcgacaccagcaaagtgaattatggtgtaacg gtactgccgaccttcaagggtcaaccatccaaaccgttcgttggcgtgctgagcgcaggtattaacgccgccagtccgaac aaagagctggcgaaagagttcctcgaaaactatctgctgactgatgaaggtctggaagcggttaataaagacaaaccgctg ggtgccgtagcgctgaagtcttacgaggaagagttggcgaaagatccacgtAATGAAGCCATACCAAAC GACGAGCGTGACACCACGATGCCTGCAGCAATGGCAACAACGTTGCGCAA ACTATTAACTGGCGAACTACTTACTCTAGCTTCCCGGCAACAATTAATAGA CTGGATGGAGGCGGATAAAGTTGCAGGACCACTTCTGCGCTCGGCCCTTC CGGCTGGCTGGTTTATTGCTGATAAATCTGGAGCCGGTGAGCGTGGGTCTC GCGGTATCATTGCAGCACTGGGGCCAGATGGTAAGCCCTCCCGTATCGTA GTTATCTACACGACGGGGAGTCAGGCAACTATGGATGAACGAAATAGACA GATCGCTGAGATAGGTGCCTCACTGATTAAGCATTGGGACAAGAGCCACC CAGAAACGCTGGTGAAAGTAAAAGATGCTGAAGATCAGTTGGGTGCACG AGTGGGTTACATCGAACTGGATCTCAACAGCGGTAAGATCCTTGAGAGTT TTCGCCCCGAAGAACGTTTTCCAATGATGAGCACTTTTAAAGTTCTGCTAT GTGGCGCGGTATTATCCCGTGTTGACGCCGGGCAAGAGCAACTCGGTCGC CGCATACACTATTCTCAGAATGACTTGGTTGAGTACTCACCAGTCACAGA AAAGCATCTTACGGATGGCATGACAGTAAGAGAATTATGCAGTGCTGCCA TAACCATGAGTGATAACACTGCGGCCAACTTACTTCTGACAACGATCGGA GGACCGAAGGAGCTAACCGCTTTTTTGCACAACATGGGGGATCATGTAAC TCGCCTTGATCGTTGGGAACCGGAACTGAATGAAGCCgccgccaccatggaaaacgc ccagaaaggtgaaatcatgccgaacatcccgcagatgtccgctttctggtatgccgtgcgtactgcggtgatcaacgccgc cagcggtcgtcagactgtcgatgaagccctgaaagacgcgcagactcgtatcaccaagtaa Amino Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 36) MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAKIEEGKLVIWINGDKGYNGLAEVG KKFEKDTGIKVTVEHPDKLEEKFPQVAATGDGPDIIFWAHDRFGGYAQSG LLAEITPDKAFQDKLYPFTWDAVRYNGKLIAYPIAVEALSLIYNKDLLPN PPKTWEEIPALDKELKAKGKSALMFNLQEPYFTWPLIAADGGYAFKYENG KYDIKDVGVDNAGAKAGLTFLVDLIKNKHMNADTDYSIAEAAFNKGETAM TINGPWAWSNIDTSKVNYGVTVLPTFKGQPSKPFVGVLSAGINAASPNKE LAKEFLENYLLTDEGLEAVNKDKPLGAVALKSYEEELAKDPRNEAIPNDE RDTTMPAAMATTLRKLLTGELLTLASRQQLIDWMEADKVAGPLLRSALPA GWFIADKSGAGERGSRGIIAALGPDGKPSRIVVIYTTGSQATMDERNRQI AEIGASLIKHWDKSHPETLVKVKDAEDQLGARVGYIELDLNSGKILESFR PEERFPMMSTFKVLLCGAVLSRVDAGQEQLGRRIHYSQNDLVEYSPVTEK HLTDGMTVRELCSAAITMSDNTAANLLLTTIGGPKELTAFLHNMGDHVTR LDRWEPELNEAAATMENAQKGEIMPNIPQMSAFWYAVRTAVINAASGRQT VDEALKDAQTRITK Switch MBP 317-347: Nucleic Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 37) atgaaaataaaaacaggtgcacgcatcctcgcattatccgcattaacgacgatgatgttttccgcctcggctctcgccaaaat cgaagaaggtaaactggtaatctggattaacggcgataaaggctataacggtctcgctgaagtcggtaagaaattcgagaa agataccggaattaaagtcaccgttgagcatccggataaactggaagagaaattcccacaggttgcggcaactggcgatg gccctgacattatcttctgggcacacgaccgctttggtggctacgctcaatctggcctgttggctgaaatcaccccggacaa agcgttccaggacaagctgtatccgtttacctgggatgccgtacgttacaacggcaagctgattgcttacccgatcgctgttg aagcgttatcgctgatttataacaaagatctgctgccgaacccgccaaaaacctgggaagagatcccggcgctggataaag aactgaaagcgaaaggtaagagcgcgctgatgttcaacctgcaagaaccgtacttcacctggccgctgattgctgctgacg ggggttatgcgttcaagtatgaaaacggcaagtacgacattaaagacgtgggcgtggataacgctggcgcgaaagcggg tctgaccttcctggttgacctgattaaaaacaaacacatgaatgcagacaccgattactccatcgcagaagctgcctttaataa aggcgaaacagcgatgaccatcaacggcccgtgggcatggtccaacatcgacaccagcaaagtgaattatggtgtaacg gtactgccgaccttcaagggtcaaccatccaaaccgttcgttggcgtgctgagcgcaggtattaacgccgccagtccgaac aaagagctggcgaaagagttcctcgaaaactatctgctgactgatgaaggtctggaagcggttaataaagacaaaccgctg ggtgccgtagcgctgaagtcttacgaggaagagttggcgaaagatccacgtGCCATACCAAACGACGAG CGTGACACCACGATGCCTGCAGCAATGGCAACAACGTTGCGCAAACTATT AACTGGCGAACTACTTACTCTAGCTTCCCGGCAACAATTAATAGACTGGA TGGAGGCGGATAAAGTTGCAGGACCACTTCTGCGCTCGGCCCTTCCGGCT GGCTGGTTTATTGCTGATAAATCTGGAGCCGGTGAGCGTGGGTCTCGCGG TATCATTGCAGCACTGGGGCCAGATGGTAAGCCCTCCCGTATCGTAGTTAT CTACACGACGGGGAGTCAGGCAACTATGGATGAACGAAATAGACAGATC GCTGAGATAGGTGCCTCACTGATTAAGCATTGGGACAAGAGCCACCCAGA AACGCTGGTGAAAGTAAAAGATGCTGAAGATCAGTTGGGTGCACGAGTG GGTTACATCGAACTGGATCTCAACAGCGGTAAGATCCTTGAGAGTTTTCG CCCCGAAGAACGTTTTCCAATGATGAGCACTTTTAAAGTTCTGCTATGTGG CGCGGTATTATCCCGTGTTGACGCCGGGCAAGAGCAACTCGGTCGCCGCA TACACTATTCTCAGAATGACTTGGTTGAGTACTCACCAGTCACAGAAAAG CATCTTACGGATGGCATGACAGTAAGAGAATTATGCAGTGCTGCCATAAC CATGAGTGATAACACTGCGGCCAACTTACTTCTGACAACGATCGGAGGAC CGAAGGAGCTAACCGCTTTTTTGCACAACATGGGGGATCATGTAACTCGC CTTGAT CGTTGGGAACCGGAACTGAATGAAGCCgccgccaccatggaaaacgcccagaaaggtgaaat catgccgaacatcccgcagatgtccgctttctggtatgccgtgcgtactgcggtgatcaacgccgccagcggtcgtcagac tgtcgatgaagccctgaaagacgcgcagactcgtatcaccaagtaa Amino Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 38) MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAKIEEGKLVIWINGDKGYNGLAEVGKK FEKDTGIKVTVEHPDKLEEKFPQVAATGDGPDIIFWAHDRFGGYAQSGLLAEI TPDKAFQDKLYPFTWDAVRYNGKLIAYPIAVEALSLIYNKDLLPNPPKTWEEI PALDKELKAKGKSALMFNLQEPYFTWPLIAADGGYAFKYENGKYDIKDVGV DNAGAKAGLTFLVDLIKNKHMNADTDYSIAEAAFNKGETAMTINGPWAWSN IDTSKVNYGVTVLPTFKGQPSKPFVGVLSAGINAASPNKELAKEFLENYLLTD EGLEAVNKDKPLGAVALKSYEEELAKDPRAIPNDERDTTMPAAMATTLRKLL TGELLTLASRQQLIDWMEADKVAGPLLRSALPAGWFIADKSGAGERGSRGIIA ALGPDGKPSRIVVIYTTGSQATMDERNRQIAEIGASLIKHWDKSHPETLVKVK DAEDQLGARVGYIELDLNSGKILESFRPEERFPMMSTFKVLLCGAVLSRVDAG QEQLGRRIHYSQNDLVEYSPVTEKHLTDGMTVRELCSAAITMSDNTAANLLL TTIGGPKELTAFLHNMGDHVTRLDRWEPELNEAAATMENAQKGEIMPNIPQ MSAFWYAVRTAVINAASGRQTVDEALKDAQTRITK Switch MBP 317-639: Nucleic Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 39) atgaaaataaaaacaggtgcacgcatcctcgcattatccgcattaacgacgatgatgttttccgcctcggctctcgccaaaat cgaagaaggtaaactggtaatctggattaacggcgataaaggctataacggtctcgctgaagtcggtaagaaattcgagaa agataccggaattaaagtcaccgttgagcatccggataaactggaagagaaattcccacaggttgcggcaactggcgatg gccctgacattatcttctgggcacacgaccgctttggtggctacgctcaatctggcctgttggctgaaatcaccccggacaa agcgttccaggacaagctgtatccgtttacctgggatgccgtacgttacaacggcaagctgattgcttacccgatcgctgttg aagcgttatcgctgatttataacaaagatctgctgccgaacccgccaaaaacctgggaagagatcccggcgctggataaag aactgaaagcgaaaggtaagagcgcgctgatgttcaacctgcaagaaccgtacttcacctggccgctgattgctgctgacg ggggttatgcgttcaagtatgaaaacggcaagtacgacattaaagacgtgggcgtggataacgctggcgcgaaagcggg tctgaccttcctggttgacctgattaaaaacaaacacatgaatgcagacaccgattactccatcgcagaagctgcctttaataa aggcgaaacagcgatgaccatcaacggcccgtgggcatggtccaacatcgacaccagcaaagtgaattatggtgtaacg gtactgccgaccttcaagggtcaaccatccaaaccgttcgttggcgtgctgagcgcaggtattaacgccgccagtccgaac aaagagctggcgaaagagttcctcgaaaactatctgctgactgatgaaggtctggaagcggttaataaagacaaaccgctg ggtgccgtagcgctgaagtcttacgaggaagagttggcgaaagatccacgtCCAAACGACGAGCGTGAC ACCACGATGCCTGCAGCAATGGCAACAACGTTGCGCAAACTATTAACTGG CGAACTACTTACTCTAGCTTCCCGGCAACAATTAATAGACTGGATGGAGG CGGATAAAGTTGCAGGACCACTTCTGCGCTCGGCCCTTCCGGCTGGCTGGT TTATTGCTGATAAATCTGGAGCCGGTGAGCGTGGGTCTCGCGGTATCATTG CAGCACTGGGGCCAGATGGTAAGCCCTCCCGTATCGTAGTTATCTACACG ACGGGGAGTCAGGCAACTATGGATGAACGAAATAGACAGATCGCTGAGA TAGGTGCCTCACTGATTAAGCATTGGGACAAGAGCCACCCAGAAACGCTG GTGAAAGTAAAAGATGCTGAAGATCAGTTGGGTGCACGAGTGGGTTACAT CGAACTGGATCTCAACAGCGGTAAGATCCTTGAGAGTTTTCGCCCCGAAG AACGTTTTCCAATGATGAGCACTTTTAAAGTTCTGCTATGTGGCGCGGTAT TATCCCGTGTTGACGCCGGGCAAGAGCAACTCGGTCGCCGCATACACTAT TCTCAGAATGACTTGGTTGAGTACTCACCAGTCACAGAAAAGCATCTTAC GGATGGCATGACAGTAAGAGAATTATGCAGTGCTGCCATAACCATGAGTG ATAACACTGCGGCCAACTTACTTCTGACAACGATCGGAGGACCGAAGGAG CTAACCGCTTTTTTGCACAACATGGGGGATCATGTAACTCGCCTTGATCGT TGGGAACCGGAACTGAATGAAGCCgccgccaccatggaaaacgcccagaaaggtgaaatcatgc cgaacatcccgcagatgtccgctttctggtatgccgtgcgtactgcggtgatcaacgccgccagcggtcgtcagactgtcg atgaagccctgaaagacgcgcagactcgtatcaccaagtaa Amino Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 40) MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAKIEEGKLVIWINGDKGYNGLAEVGKK FEKDTGIKVTVEHPDKLEEKFPQVAATGDGPDIIFWAHDRFGGYAQSGLLAEI TPDKAFQDKLYPFTWDAVRYNGKLIAYPIAVEALSLIYNKDLLPNPPKTWEEI PALDKELKAKGKSALMFNLQEPYFTWPLIAADGGYAFKYENGKYDIKDVGV DNAGAKAGLTFLVDLIKNKHMNADTDYSIAEAAFNKGETAMTINGPWAWSN IDTS KVNYGVTVLPTFKGQPSKPFVGVLSAGINAASPNKELAKEFLENYLLTD EGLEAVNKDKPLGAVALKSYEEELAKDPRPNDERDTTMPAAMATTLRKLLT GELLTLASRQQLIDWMEADKVAGPLLRSALPAGWFIADKSGAGERGSRGIIA ALGPDGKPSRIVVIYTTGSQATMDERNRQIAEIGASLIKHWDKSHPETLVKVK DAEDQLGARVGYIELDLNSGKILESFRPEERFPMMSTFKVLLCGAVLSRVDAG QEQLGRRIHYSQNDLVEYSPVTEKHLTDGMTVRELCSAAITMSDNTAANLLL TTIGGPKELTAFLHNMGDHVTRLDRWEPELNEAAATMENAQKGEIMPNIPQ MSAFWYAVRTAVINAASGRQTVDEALKDAQTRITK Switch MBP 317-694: Nucleic Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 41) atgaaaataaaaacaggtgcacgcatcctcgcattatccgcattaacgacgatgatgttttccgcctcggctctcgccaaaat cgaagaaggtaaactggtaatctggattaacggcgataaaggctataacggtctcgctgaagtcggtaagaaattcgagaa agataccggaattaaagtcaccgttgagcatccggataaactggaagagaaattcccacaggttgcggcaactggcgatg gccctgacattatcttctgggcacacgaccgctttggtggctacgctcaatctggcctgttggctgaaatcaccccggacaa agcgttccaggacaagctgtatccgtttacctgggatgccgtacgttacaacggcaagctgattgcttacccgatcgctgttg aagcgttatcgctgatttataacaaagatctgctgccgaacccgccaaaaacctgggaagagatcccggcgctggataaag aactgaaagcgaaaggtaagagcgcgctgatgttcaacctgcaagaaccgtacttcacctggccgctgattgctgctgacg ggggttatgcgttcaagtatgaaaacggcaagtacgacattaaagacgtgggcgtggataacgctggcgcgaaagcggg tctgaccttcctggttgacctgattaaaaacaaacacatgaatgcagacaccgattactccatcgcagaagctgcttttaataa aggcgaaacagcgatgaccatcaacggcccgtgggcatggtccaacatcgacaccagcaaagtgaattatggtgtaacg gtactgccgaccttcaagggtcaaccatccaaaccgttcgttggcgtgctgagcgcaggtattaacgccgccagtccgaac aaagagctggcgaaagagttcctcgaaaactatctgctgactgatgaaggtctggaagcggttaataaagacaaaccgctg ggtgccgtagcgctgaagtcttacgaggaagagttggcgaaagatccacgtATACCAAACGACGAGCGT GACACCACGATGCCTGCAGCAATGGCAACAACGTTGCGCAAACTATTAAC TGGCGAACTACTTACTCTAGCTTCCCGGCAACAATTAATAGACTGGATGG AGGCGGATAAAGTTGCAGGACCACTTCTGCGCTCGGCCCTTCCGGCTGGC TGGTTTATTGCTGATAAATCTGGAGCCGGTGAGCGTGGGTCTCGCGGTATC ATTGCAGCACTGGGGCCAGATGGTAAGCCCTCCCGTATCGTAGTTATCTAC ACGACGGGGAGTCAGGCAACTATGGATGAACGAAATAGACAGATCGCTG AGATAGGTGCCTCACTGATTAAGCATTGGGACAAGAGCCACCCAGAAACG CTGGTGAAAGTAAAAGATGCTGAAGATCAGTTGGGTGCACGAGTGGGTTA CATCGAACTGGATCTCAACAGCGGTAAGATCCTTGAGAGTTTTCGCCCCG AAGAACGTTTTCCAATGATGAGCACTTTTAAAGTTCTGCTATGTGGCGCGG TATTATCCCGTGTTGACGCCGGGCAAGAGCAACTCGGTCGCCGCATACAC TATTCTCAGAATGACTTGGTTGAGTACTCACCAGTCACAGAAAAGCATCTT ACGGATGGCATGACAGTAAGAGAATTATGCAGTGCTGCCATAACCATGAG TGATAACACTGCGGCCAACTTACTTCTGACAACGATCGGAGGACCGAAGG AGCTAACCGCTTTTTTGCACAACATGGGGGATCATGTAACTCGCCTTGATC GTTGGGAACCGGAACTGAATGAAGCCgccgccaccatggaaaacgcccagaaaggtgaaatca tgccgaacatcccgcagatgtccgctttctggtatgccgtgcgtactgcggtgatcaacgccgccagcggtcgtcagactgt cgatgaagccctgaaagacgcgcagactcgtatcaccaagtaa Amino Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 42) MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAKIEEGKLVIWINGDKGYNGLAEVGKK FEKDTGIKVTVEHPDKLEEKFPQVAATGDGPDIIFWAHDRFGGYAQSGLLAEI TPDKAFQDKLYPFTWDAVRYNGKLIAYPIAVEALSLIYNKDLLPNPPKTWEEI PALDKELKAKGKSALMFNLQEPYFTWPLIAADGGYAFKYENGKYDIKDVGV DNAGAKAGLTFLVDLIKNKHMNADTDYSIAEAAFNKGETAMTINGPWAWSN IDTSKVNYGVTVLPTFKGQPSKPFVGVLSAGINAASPNKELAKEFLENYLLTD EGLEAVNKDKPLGAVALKSYEEELAKDPRIPNDERDTTMPAAMATTLRKLLT GELLTLASRQQLIDWMEADKVAGPLLRSALPAGWFIADKSGAGERGSRGIIA ALGPDGKPSRIVVIYTTGSQATMDERNRQIAEIGASLIKHWDKSHPETLVKVK DAEDQLGARVGYIELDLNSGKILESFRPEERFPMMSTFKVLLCGAVLSRVDAG QEQLGRRIHYSQNDLVEYSPVTEKHLTDGMTVRELCSAAITMSDNTAANLLL TTIGGPKELTAFLHNMGDHVTRLDRWEPELNEAAATMENAQKGEIMPNIPQ MSAFWYAVRTAVINAASGRQTVDEALKDAQTRITK Switch BLA168-88: Nucleic Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 43) atgaaaataaaaacaggtgcacgcatcctcgcattatccgcattaacgacgatgatgttttccgcctcggctctcgccaaaat cgaagaaggtaaactggtaatctggattaacggcgataaaggctataacggtctcgctgaagtcggtaagaaattcgagaa agataccggaattaaagtcaccgttgagcatccggataaactggaagagaaattcccacaggttgcggcaactggcgatg gccctgacattatcttctgggcacacgaccgctttggtggctacgctcaatctggcctgttggctgaaatcaccccggacaa agcgttccaggacaagctgtatccgtttacctgggatgccgtacgttacaacggcaagctgattgcttacccgatcgctgttg aagcgttatcgctgatttataacaaagatctgctgccgaacccgccaaaaacctgggaagagatcccggcgctggataaag aactgaaagcgaaaggtaagagcgcgctgatgttcaacctgcaagaaccgtacttcacctggccgctgattgctgctgacg ggggttatgcgttcaagtatgaaaacggcaagtacgacattaaagacgtgggcgtggataacgctggcgcgaaagcggg tctgaccttcctggttAATGAAGCCATACCAAACGACGAGCGTGACACCACGATGCC TGCAGCAATGGCAACAACGTTGCGCAAACTATTAACTGGCGAACTACTTA CTCTAGCTTCCCGGCAACAATTAATAGACTGGATGGAGGCGGATAAAGTT GCAGGACCACTTCTGCGCTCGGCCCTTCCGGCTGGCTGGTTTATTGCTGAT AAATCTGGAGCCGGTGAGCGTGGGTCTCGCGGTATCATTGCAGCACTGGG GCCAGATGGTAAGCCCTCCCGTATCGTAGTTATCTACACGACGGGGAGTC AGGCAACTATGGATGAACGAAATAGACAGATCGCTGAGATAGGTGCCTCA CTGATTAAGCATTGGGACAAGAGCCACCCAGAAACGCTGGTGAAAGTAA AAGATGCTGAAGATCAGTTGGGTGCACGAGTGGGTTACATCGAACTGGAT CTCAACAGCGGTAAGATCCTTGAGAGTTTTCGCCCCGAAGAACGTTTTCCA ATGATGAGCACTTTTAAAGTTCTGCTATGTGGCGCGGTATTATCCCGTGTT GACGCCGGGCAAGAGCAACTCGGTCGCCGCATACACTATTCTCAGAATGA CTTGGTTGAGTACTCACCAGTCACAGAAAAGCATCTTACGGATGGCATGA CAGTAAGAGAATTATGCAGTGCTGCCATAACCATGAGTGATAACACTGCG GCCAACTTACTTCTGACAACGATCGGAGGACCGAAGGAGCTAACCGCTTT TTTGCACAACATGGGGGATCATGTAACTCGCCTTGATCGTTGGGAACCGG AACTGAATGAAGCCgttgacctgattaaaaacaaacacatgaatgcagacaccgattactccatcgcagaag ctgcctttaataaaggcgaaacagcgatgaccatcaacggcccgtgggcatggtccaacatcgacaccagcaaagtgaat tatggtgtaacggtactgccgaccttcaagggtcaaccatccaaaccgttcgttggcgtgctgagcgcaggtattaacgccg ccagtccgaacaaagagctggcgaaagagttcctcgaaaactatctgctgactgatgaaggtctggaagcggttaataaag acaaaccgctgggtgccgtagcgctgaagtcttacgaggaagagttggcgaaagatccacgtattgccgccaccatggaa aacgcccagaaaggtgaaatcatgccgaacatcccgcagatgtccgctttctggtatgccgtgcgtactgcggtgatcaac gccgccagcggtcgtcagactgtcgatgaagccctgaaagacgcgcagactcgtatcaccaagtaa Amino Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 44) MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAKIEEGKLVIWINGDKGYNGLAEVG KKEEKDTGIKVTVEHPDKLEEKFPQVAATGDGPDIIFWAHDRFGGYAQSG LLAEITPDKAFQDKLYPFTWDAVRYNGKLIAYPIAVEALSLIYNKDLLPN PPKTWEEIPALDKELKAKGKSALMFNLQEPYFTWPLIAADGGYAFKYENG KYDIKDVGVDNAGAKAGLTFLVNEAIPNDERDTTMPAAMATTLRKLLTGE LLTLASRQQLIDWMEADKVAGPLLRSALPAGWFIADKSGAGERGSRGIIA ALGPDGKPSRIVVIYTTGSQATMDERNRQIAEIGASLIKHWDKSHPETLV KVKDAEDQLGARVGYIELDLNSGKILESFRPEERFPMMSTFKVLLCGAVL SRVDAGQEQLGRRIHYSQNDLVEYSPVTEKHLTDGMTVRELCSAAITMSD NTAANLLLTTIGGPKELTAFLHNMGDHVTRLDRWEPELNEAVDLIKNKHM NADTDYSIAEAAFNKGETAMTINGPWAWSNIDTSKVNYGVTVLPTFKGQP SKPFVGVLSAGINAASPNKELAKEFLENYLLTDEGLEAVNKDKPLGAVAL KSYEEELAKDPRIAATMENAQKGEIMPNIPQMSAFWYAVRTAVINAASGR QTVDEALKDAQTRITK Switch BLA168-45: Nucleic Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 45) atgaaaataaaaacaggtgcacgcatcctcgcattatccgcattaacgacgatgatgttttccgcctcggctctcgccaaaat cgaagaaggtaaactggtaatctggattaacggcgataaaggctataacggtctcgctgaagtcggtaagaaattcgagaa agataccggaattaaagtcaccgttgagcatccggataaactggaagagaaattcccacaggttgcggcaactggcgatg gccctgacattatcttctgggcacacgaccgctttggtggctacgctcaatctggcctgttggctgaaatcaccccggacaa agcgttccaggacaagctgtatccgtttacctgggatgccgtacgttacaacggcaagctgattgcttacccgatcgctgttg aagcgttatcgctgatttataacaaagatctgctgccgaacccgccaaaaacctgggaagagatcccggcgctggataaag aactgaaagcgaaaggtaagagcgcgctgatgttcaacctgcaagaaccgtacttcacctggccgctgattgctgctgacg ggggttatgcgttcaagtatgaaaacggcaagtacgacattaaagacgtgggcgtggataacgctggcgcgaaagcggg tctgaccttcctggttgacctgattAATGAAGCCATACCAAACGACGAGCGTGACACCAC GATGCCTGCAGCAATGGCAACAACGTTGCGCAAACTATTAACTGGCGAAC TACTTACTCTAGCTTCCCGGCAACAATTAATAGACTGGATGGAGGCGGAT AAAGTTGCAGGACCACTTCTGCGCTCGGCCCTTCCGGCTGGCTGGTTTATT GCTGATAAATCTGGAGCCGGTGAGCGTGGGTCTCGCGGTATCATTGCAGC ACTGGGGCCAGATGGTAAGCCCTCCCGTATCGTAGTTATCTACACGACGG GGAGTCAGGCAACTATGGATGAACGAAATAGACAGATCGCTGAGATAGG TGCCTCACTGATTAAGCATTGGGACAAGAGCCACCCAGAAACGCTGGTGA AAGTAAAAGATGCTGAAGATCAGTTGGGTGCACGAGTGGGTTACATCGAA CTGGATCTCAACAGCGGTAAGATCCTTGAGAGTTTTCGCCCCGAAGAACG TTTTCCAATGATGAGCACTTTTAAAGTTCTGCTATGTGGCGCGGTATTATC CCGTGTTGACGCCGGGCAAGAGCAACTCGGTCGCCGCATACACTATTCTC AGAATGACTTGGTTGAGTACTCACCAGTCACAGAAAAGCATCTTACGGAT GGCATGACAGTAAGAGAATTATGCAGTGCTGCCATAACCATGAGTGATAA CACTGCGGCCAACTTACTTCTGACAACGATCGGAGGACCGAAGGAGCTAA CCGCTTTTTTGCACAACATGGGGGATCATGTAACTCGCCTTGATCGTTGGG AACCGGAACTGAATGAAGCCcacatgaatgcagacaccgattactccatcgcagaagctgcctttaata aaggcgaaacagcgatgaccatcaacggcccgtgggcatggtccaacatcgacaccagcaaagtgaattatggtgtaac ggtactgccgaccttcaagggtcaaccatccaaaccgttcgttggcgtgctgagcgcaggtattaacgccgccagtccgaa caaagagctggcgaaagagttcctcgaaaactatctgctgactgatgaaggtctggaagcggttaataaagacaaaccgct gggtgccgtagcgctgaagtcttacgaggaagagttggcgaaagatccacgtattgccgccaccatggaaaacgcccag aaaggtgaaatcatgccgaacatcccgcagatgtccgctttctggtatgccgtgcgtactgcggtgatcaacgccgccagc ggtcgtcagactgtcgatgaagccctgaaagacgcgcagactcgtatcaccaagtaa Amino Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 46) MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAKIEEGKLVIWINGDKGYNGLAEVG KKFEKDTGIKVTVEHPDKLEEKFPQVAATGDGPDIIFWAHDRFGGYAQSG LLAEITPDKAFQDKLYPFTWDAVRYNGKLIAYPIAVEALSLIYNKDLLPN PPKTWEEIPALDKELKAKGKSALMFNLQEPYFTWPLIAADGGYAFKYENG KYDIKDVGVDNAGAKAGLTFLVDLINEAIPNDERDTTMPAAMATTLRKLL TGELLTLASRQQLIDWMEADKVAGPLLRSALPAGWFIADKSGAGERGSRG IIAALGPDGKPSRIVVIYTTGSQATMDERNRQIAEIGASLIKHWDKSHPE TLVKVKDAEDQLGARVGYIELDLNSGKILESFRPEERFPMMSTFKVLLCG AVLSRVDAGQEQLGRRIHYSQNDLVEYSPVTEKHLTDGMTVRELCSAAIT MSDNTAANLLLTTIGGPKELTAFLHNMGDHVTRLDRWEPELNEAHMNADT DYSIAEAAFNKGETAMTINGPWAWSNIDTSKVNYGVTVLPTFKGQPSKPF VGVLSAGINAASPNKELAKEFLENYLLTDEGLEAVNKDKPLGAVALKSYE EELAKDPRIAATMENAQKGEIMPNIPQMSAFWYAVRTAVINAASGRQTVD EALKDAQTRITK Switch BLA168-69: Nucleic Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 47) atgaaaataaaaacaggtgcacgcatcctcgcattatccgcattaacgacgatgatgttttccgcctcggctctcgccaaaat cgaagaaggtaaactggtaatctggattaacggcgataaaggctataacggtctcgctgaagtcggtaagaaattcgagaa agataccggaattaaagtcaccgttgagcatccggataaactggaagagaaattcccacaggttgcggcaactggcgatg gccctgacattatcttctgggcacacgaccgctttggtggctacgctcaatctggcctgttggctgaaatcaccccggacaa agcgttccaggacaagctgtatccgtttacctgggatgccgtacgttacaacggcaagctgattgcttacccgatcgctgttg aagcgttatcgctgatttataacaaagatctgctgccgaacccgccaaaaacctgggaagagatcccggcgctggataaag aactgaaagcgaaaggtaagagcgcgctgatgttcaacctgcaagaaccgtacttcacctggccgctgattgctgctgacg ggggttatgcgttcaagtatgaaaacggcaagtacgacattaaagacgtgggcgtggataacgctggcgcgaaagcggg tctgaccttcctggttgacctgattaaaaacaaacacatgaatgcagacaccgattactccatcgcagaagctgcctttaataa aggcgaaacagcgatgaccatcaacggcccgtgggcatggtccaacatcgacaccagcaaagtgaattatggtgtaacg gtactgccgaccttcaagggtcaaccatccaaaccgttcgttggcgtgctgagcgcaggtattaacgccgccagtccgaac aaagagctggcgaaagagttcctcgaaaactatctgctgactgatgaaggtctggaagcggttaataaagacaaaccgctg ggtgccgtagcgctgaagtcttacgaggaagagttggcgaaagatccacgtAATGAAGCCATACCAAAC GACGAGCGTGACACCACGATGCCTGCAGCAATGGCAACAACGTTGCGCAA ACTATTAACTGGCGAACTACTTACTCTAGCTTCCCGGCAACAATTAATAGA CTGGATGGAGGCGGATAAAGTTGCAGGACCACTTCTGCGCTCGGCCCTTC CGGCTGGCTGGTTTATTGCTGATAAATCTGGAGCCGGTGAGCGTGGGTCTC GCGGTATCATTGCAGCACTGGGGCCAGATGGTAAGCCCTCCCGTATCGTA GTTATCTACACGACGGGGAGTCAGGCAACTATGGATGAACGAAATAGACA GATCGCTGAGATAGGTGCCTCACTGATTAAGCATTGGGACAAGAGCCACC CAGAAACGCTGGTGAAAGTAAAAGATGCTGAAGATCAGTTGGGTGCACG AGTGGGTTACATCGAACTGGATCTCAACAGCGGTAAGATCCTTGAGAGTT TTCGCCCCGAAGAACGTTTTCCAATGATGAGCACTTTTAAAGTTCTGCTAT GTGGCGCGGTATTATCCCGTGTTGACGCCGGGCAAGAGCAACTCGGTCGC CGCATACACTATTCTCAGAATGACTTGGTTGAGTACTCACCAGTCACAGA AAAGCATCTTACGGATGGCATGACAGTAAGAGAATTATGCAGTGCTGCCA TAACCATGAGTGATAACACTGCGGCCAACTTACTTCTGACAACGATCGGA GGACCGAAGGAGCTAACCGCTTTTTTGCACAACATGGGGGATCATGTAAC TCGCCTTGATCGTTGGGAACCGGAACTGAATGAAGCCaccatggaaaacgcccagaa aggtgaaatcatgccgaacatcccgcagatgtccgctttctggtatgccgtgcgtactgcggtgatcaacgccgccagcgg tcgtcagactgtcgatgaagccctgaaagacgcgcagactcgtatcaccaagtaa Amino Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 48) MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAKIEEGKLVIWINGDKGYNGLAEVG KKFEKDTGIKVTVEHPDKLEEKFPQVAATGDGPDIIFWAHDRFGGYAQSG LLAEITPDKAFQDKLYPFTWDAVRYNGKLIAYPIAVEALSLIYNKDLLPN PPKTWEEIPALDKELKAKGKSALMFNLQEPYFTWPLIAADGGYAFKYENG KYDIKDVGVDNAGAKAGLTFLVDLIKNKHMNADTDYSIAEAAFNKGETAM TINGPWAWSNIDTSKVNYGVTVLPTFKGQPSKPFVGVLSAGINAASPNKE LAKEFLENYLLTDEGLEAVNKDKPLGAVALKSYEEELAKDPRNEAIPNDE RDTTMPAAMATTLRKLLTGELLTLASRQQLIDWMEADKVAGPLLRSALPA GWFIADKSGAGERGSRGIIAALGPDGKPSRIVVIYTTGSQATMDERNRQI AEIGASLIKHWDKSHPETLVKVKDAEDQLGARVGYIELDLNSGKILESFR PEERFPMMSTFKVLLCGAVLSRVDAGQEQLGRRIHYSQNDLVEYSPVTEK HLTDGMTVRELCSAAITMSDNTAANLLLTTIGGPKELTAFLHNMGDHVTR LDRWEPELNEATMENAQKGEIMPNIPQMSAFWYAVRTAVINAASGRQTVD EALKDAQTRITK Switch BLA168-86: Nucleic Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 49) atgaaaataaaaacaggtgcacgcatcctcgcattatccgcattaacgacgatgatgttttccgcctcggctctcgccaaaat cgaagaaggtaaactggtaatctggattaacggcgataaaggctataacggtctcgctgaagtcggtaagaaattcgagaa agataccggaattaaagtcaccgttgagcatccggataaactggaagagaaattcccacaggttgcggcaactggcgatg gccctgacattatcttctgggcacacgaccgctttggtggctacgctcaatctggcctgttggctgaaatcaccccggacaa agcgttccaggacaagctgtatccgtttacctgggatgccgtacgttacaacggcaagctgattgcttacccgatcgctgttg aagcgttatcgctgatttataacaaagatctgctgccgaacccgccaaaaacctgggaagagatcccggcgctggataaag aactgaaagcgaaaggtaagagcgcgctgatgttcaacctgcaagaaccgtacttcacctggccgctgattgctgctgacg ggggttatgcgttcaagtatgaaaacggcaagtacgacattaaagacgtgggcgtggataacgctggcgcgaaagcggg tctgaccttcctggttgacctgattaaaaacaaacacatgaatgcagacaccgattactccatcgcagaagctgcctttaataa aggcgaaacagcgatgaccatcaacggcccgtgggcatggtccaacatcgacaccagcaaagtgaattatggtgtaacg gtactgccgaccttcaagggtcaaccatccaaaccgttcgttggcgtgctgagcgcaggtattaacgccgccagtccgaac aaagagctggcgaaagagttcctcgaaaactatctgctgactgatgaaggtctggaagcggttaataaagacaaaccgctg ggtgccgtagcgctgaagtcttacgaggaagagttggcgaaagatccacgtattgccgccaccAATGAAGCCA TACCAAACGACGAGCGTGACACCACGATGCCTGCAGCAATGGCAACAAC GTTGCGCAAACTATTAACTGGCGAACTACTTACTCTAGCTTCCCGGCAACA ATTAATAGACTGGATGGAGGCGGATAAAGTTGCAGGACCACTTCTGCGCT CGGCCCTTCCGGCTGGCTGGTTTATTGCTGATAAATCTGGAGCCGGTGAGC GTGGGTCTCGCGGTATCATTGCAGCACTGGGGCCAGATGGTAAGCCCTCC CGTATCGTAGTTATCTACACGACGGGGAGTCAGGCAACTATGGATGAACG AAATAGACAGATCGCTGAGATAGGTGCCTCACTGATTAAGCATTGGGACA AGAGCCACCCAGAAACGCTGGTGAAAGTAAAAGATGCTGAAGATCAGTT GGGTGCACGAGTGGGTTACATCGAACTGGATCTCAACAGCGGTAAGATCC TTGAGAGTTTTCGCCCCGAAGAACGTTTTCCAATGATGAGCACTTTTAAAG TTCTGCTATGTGGCGCGGTATTATCCCGTGTTGACGCCGGGCAAGAGCAA CTCGGTCGCCGCATACACTATTCTCAGAATGACTTGGTTGAGTACTCACCA GTCACAGAAAAGCATCTTACGGATGGCATGACAGTAAGAGAATTATGCAG TGCTGCCATAACCATGAGTGATAACACTGCGGCCAACTTACTTCTGACAA CGATCGGAGGACCGAAGGAGCTAACCGCTTTTTTGCACAACATGGGGGAT CATGTAACTCGCCTTGATCGTTGGGAACCGGAACTGAATGAAGCCgccgccac catggaaaacgcccagaaaggtgaaatcatgccgaacatcccgcagatgtccgctttctggtatgccgtgcgtactgcggt gatcaacgccgccagcggtcgtcagactgtcgatgaagccctgaaagacgcgcagactcgtatcaccaagtaa Amino Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 50) MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAKIEEGKLVIWINGDKGYNGLAEVG KKFEKDTGIKVTVEHPDKLEEKFPQVAATGDGPDIIFWAHDRFGGYAQSG LLAEITPDKAFQDKLYPFTWDAVRYNGKLIAYPIAVEALSLIYNKDLLPN PPKTWEEIPALDKELKAKGKSALMFNLQEPYFTWPLIAADGGYAFKYENG KYDIKDVGVDNAGAKAGLTFLVDLIKNKHMNADTDYSIAEAAFNKGETAM TINGPWAWSNIDTSKVNYGVTVLPTFKGQPSKPFVGVLSAGINAASPNKE LAKEFLENYLLTDEGLEAVNKDKPLGAVALKSYEEELAKDPRIAATNEAI PNDERDTTMPAAMATTLRKLLTGELLTLASRQQLIDWMEADKVAGPLLRS ALPAGWFIADKSGAGERGSRGIIAALGPDGKPSRIVVIYTTGSQATMDER NRQIAEIGASLIKHWDKSHPETLVKVKDAEDQLGARVGYIELDLNSGKIL ESFRPEERFPMMSTFKVLLCGAVLSRVDAGQEQLGRRIHYSQNDLVEYSP VTEKHLTDGMTVRELCSAAITMSDNTAANLLLTTIGGPKELTAFLHNMGD HVTRLDRWEPELNEAAATMENAQKGEIMPNIPQMSAFWYAVRTAVINAAS GRQTVDEALKDAQTRITK Switch BLA168-89: Nucleic Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 51) atgaaaataaaaacaggtgcacgcatcctcgcattatccgcattaacgacgatgatgttttccgcctcggctctcgccaaaat cgaagaaggtaaactggtaatctggattaacggcgataaaggctataacggtctcgctgaagtcggtaagaaattcgagaa agataccggaattaaagtcaccgttgagcatccggataaactggaagagaaattcccacaggttgcggcaactggcgatg gccctgacattatcttctgggcacacgaccgctttggtggctacgctcaatctggcctgttggctgaaatcaccccggacaa agcgttccaggacaagctgtatccgtttacctgggatgccgtacgttacaacggcaagctgattgcttacccgatcgctgttg aagcgttatcgctgatttataacaaagatctgctgccgaacccgccaaaaacctgggaagagatcccggcgctggataaag aactgaaagcgaaaggtaagagcgcgctgatgttcaacctgcaagaaccgtacttcacctggccgctgattgctgctgacg ggggttatgcgttcaagtatgaaaacggcaagtacgacattaaagacgtgggcgtggataacgctggcgcgaaagcggg tctgaccttcctggttgacctgattaaaaacaaacacatgaatgcagacaccgattactccatcgcagaagctgcctttaataa aggcgaaacagcgatgaccatcaacggcccgtgggcatggtccaacatcgacaccagcaaagtgaattatggtgtaacg gtactgccgaccttcaagggtcaaccatccaaaccgttcgttggcgtgctgagcgcaggtattaacgccgccagtccgaac aaagagctggcgaaagagttcctcgaaaactatctgctgactgatgaaggtctggaagcggttaataaagacaaaccgctg ggtgccgtagcgctgaagtcttacgaggaagagttggcgaaagatccacgtAATGAAGCCATACCAAAC GACGAGCGTGACACCACGATGCCTGCAGCAATGGCAACAACGTTGCGCAA ACTATTAACTGGCGAACTACTTACTCTAGCTTCCCGGCAACAATTAATAGA CTGGATGGAGGCGGATAAAGTTGCAGGACCACTTCTGCGCTCGGCCCTTC CGGCTGGCTGGTTTATTGCTGATAAATCTGGAGCCGGTGAGCGTGGGTCTC GCGGTATCATTGCAGCACTGGGGCCAGATGGTAAGCCCTCCCGTATCGTA GTTATCTACACGACGGGGAGTCAGGCAACTATGGATGAACGAAATAGACA GATCGCTGAGATAGGTGCCTCACTGATTAAGCATTGGGACAAGAGCCACC CAGAAACGCTGGTGAAAGTAAAAGATGCTGAAGATCAGTTGGGTGCACG AGTGGGTTACATCGAACTGGATCTCAACAGCGGTAAGATCCTTGAGAGTT TTCGCCCCGAAGAACGTTTTCCAATGATGAGCACTTTTAAAGTTCTGCTAT GTGGCGCGGTATTATCCCGTGTTGACGCCGGGCAAGAGCAACTCGGTCGC CGCATACACTATTCTCAGAATGACTTGGTTGAGTACTCACCAGTCACAGA AAAGCATCTTACGGATGGCATGACAGTAAGAGAATTATGCAGTGCTGCCA TAACCATGAGTGATAACACTGCGGCCAACTTACTTCTGACAACGATCGGA GGACCGAAGGAGCTAACCGCTTTTTTGCACAACATGGGGGATCATGTAAC TCGCCTTGATCGTTGGGAACCGGAACTGAATGAAGCCaccatggaaaacgcccagaa aggtgaaatcatgccgaacatcccgcagatgtccgctttctggtatgccgtgcgtactgcggtgatcaacgccgccagcgg tcgtcagactgtcgatgaagccctgaaagacgcgcagactcgtatcaccaagtaa Amino Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 52) MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAKIEEGKLVIWINGDKGYNGLAEVG KKFEKDTGIKVTVEHPDKLEEKFPQVAATGDGPDIIFWAHDRFGGYAQSG LLAEITPDKAFQDKLYPFTWDAVRYNGKLIAYPIAVEALSLIYNKDLLPN PPKTWEEIPALDKELKAKGKSALMFNLQEPYFTWPLIAADGGYAFKYENG KYDIKDVGVDNAGAKAGLTFLVDLIKNKHMNADTDYSIAEAAFNKGETAM TINGPWAWSNIDTSKVNYGVTVLPTFKGQPSKPFVGVLSAGINAASPNKE LAKEFLENYLLTDEGLEAVNKDKPLGAVALKSYEEELAKDPRNEAIPNDE RDTTMPAAMATTLRKLLTGELLTLASRQQLIDWMEADKVAGPLLRSALPA GWFIADKSGAGERGSRGIIAALGPDGKPSRIVVIYTTGSQATMDERNRQI AEIGASLIKHWDKSHPETLVKVKDAEDQLGARVGYIELDLNSGKILESFR PEERFPMMSTFKVLLCGAVLSRVDAGQEQLGRRIHYSQNDLVEYSPVTEK HLTDGMTVRELCSAAITMSDNTAANLLLTTIGGPKELTAFLHNMGDHVTR LDRWEPELNEATMENAQKGEIMPNIPQMSAFWYAVRTAVINAASGRQT VDEALKDAQTRITK Sucrose Switch 5-7: Nucleic Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 53) atgaaaataaaaacaggtgcacgcatcctcgcattatccgcattaacgacgatgatgttttccgcctcggctctcgccaaaat cgaagaaggtaaactggtaatctggattaacggcttgtttggctataacggtctcgctgaagtcggtaagaaattcgagaaa gataccggaattaaagtcaccgttgagcatccggataaactggaagagaaattcccacaggttgcggcaactggcgatgg ccctgacattatcttctatgcacacgaccgctttggtggctacgctcaatctggcctgttggctgaaatcaccccggacaaag cgttccaggacaagctgtatccgtttacctgggatgccgtacgttacaacggcaagctgattgcttacccgatcgctgtttatg cgttatcgctgatttataacaaagatctgctgccgaacccgccaaaaacctgggaagagatcccggcgctggataaagaac tgaaagcgaaaggtaagagcgcgctgatgttcaacctgcaagaaccgtacttcacctggccgctgattgctgctgacggg ggttatgcgttcaagtatgaaaacggcaagtacgacattaaagacgtgggcgtggataacgctggcgcgaaagcgggtct gaccttcctggttgacctgattaaaaacaaacacatgaatgcagacaccgattactccatcgcagaagctgcctttaataaag gcgaaacagcgatgaccatcaacggcccgtgggcatggtccaacatcgacaccagcaaagtgaattatggtgtaacggta ctgccgaccttcaagggtcaaccatccaaaccgttcgttggcgtgctgagcgcaggtattaacgccgccagtccgaacaaa gagctggcgaaagagttcctcgaaaactatctgctgactgatgaaggtctggaagcggttaataaagacaaaccgctgggt gccgtagcgctgaagtcttacgaggaagagttggcgaaagatccacgtGCCATACCAAACGACGAGC GTGACACCACGATGCCTGCAGCAATGGCAACAACGTTGCGCAAACTATTA ACTGGCGAACTACTTACTCTAGCTTCCCGGCAACAATTAATAGACTGGAT GGAGGCGGATAAAGTTGCAGGACCACTTCTGCGCTCGGCCCTTCCGGCTG GCTGGTTTATTGCTGATAAATCTGGAGCCGGTGAGCGTGGGTCTCGCGGT ATCATTGCAGCACTGGGGCCAGATGGTAAGCCCTCCCGTATCGTAGTTATC TACACGACGGGGAGTCAGGCAACTATGGATGAACGAAATAGACAGATCG CTGAGATAGGTGCCTCACTGATTAAGCATTGGGACAAGAGCCACCCAGAA ACGCTGGTGAAAGTAAAAGATGCTGAAGATCAGTTGGGTGCACGAGTGG GTTACATCGAACTGGATCTCAACAGCGGTAAGATCCTTGAGAGTTTTCGCC CCGAAGAACGTTTTCCAATGATGAGCACTTTTAAAGTTCTGCTATGTGGCG CGGTATTATCCCGTGTTGACGCCGGGCAAGAGCAACTCGGTCGCCGCATA CACTATTCTCAGAATGACTTGGTTGAGTACTCACCAGTCACAGAAAAGCA TCTTACGGATGGCATGACAGTAAGAGAATTATGCAGTGCTGCCATAACCA TGAGTGATAACACTGCGGCCAACTTACTTCTGACAACGATCGGAGGACCG AAGGAGCTAACCGCTTTTTTGCACAACATGGGGGATCATGTAACTCGCCTT GATCGTTGGGAACCGGAACTGAATGAAGCCgccgccaccatggaaaacgcccagaaaggt gaaatcatgccgaacatcccgcagatgtccgctttctggtatgccgtgcgtactgcggtgatcaacgccgccagcggtcgt cagactgtcgatgaagccctgaaagacgcgcagactcgtatcaccaagtaa Amino Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 54) MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAKIEEGKLVIWINGLFGYNGLAEVG KKFEKDTGIKVTVEHPDKLEEKFPQVAATGDGPDIIFYAHDRFGGYAQSG LLAEITPDKAFQDKLYPFTWDAVRYNGKLIAYPIAVYALSLIYNKDLLPN PPKTWEEIPALDKELKAKGKSALMFNLQEPYFTWPLIAADGGYAFKYENG KYDIKDVGVDNAGAKAGLTFLVDLIKNKHMNADTDYSIAEAAFNKGETAM TINGPWAWSNIDTSKVNYGVTVLPTFKGQPSKPFVGVLSAGINAASPNKE LAKEFLENYLLTDEGLEAVNKDKPLGAVALKSYEEELAKDPRAIPNDERD TTMPAAMATTLRKLLTGELLTLASRQQLIDWMEADKVAGPLLRSALPAGW FIADKSGAGERGSRGIIAALGPDGKPSRIVVIYTTGSQATMDERNRQIAE IGASLIKHWDKSHPETLVKVKDAEDQLGARVGYIELDLNSGKILESFRPE ERFPMMSTFKVLLCGAVLSRVDAGQEQLGRRIHYSQNDLVEYSPVTEKHL TDGMTVRELCSAAITMSDNTAANLLLTTIGGPKELTAFLHNMGDHVTRLD RWEPELNEAAATMENAQKGEIMPNIPQMSAFWYAVRTAVINAASGRQTVD EALKDAQTRITK Sucrose Switch 6-47: Amino Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 55) MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAKIEEGKLVIWINGLQGYNGLAEVG KKFEKDTGIKVTVEHPDKLEEKFPQVAATGDGPDIIFYAHDRFGGYAQSG LLAEITPDKAFQDKLYPFTWDAVRYNGKLIAYPIAVQALSLIYNKDLLPN PPKTWEEIPALDKELKAKGKSALMFNLQEPYFTWPLIAADGGYAFKYENG KYDIKDVGVDNAGAKAGLTFLVDLIKNKHMNADTDYSIAEAAFNKGETAM TINGPWAWSNIDTSKVNYGVTVLPTFKGQPSKPFVGVLSAGINAASPNKE LAKEFLENYLLTDEGLEAVNKDKPLGAVALKSYEEELAKDPRAIPNDERD TTMPAAMATTLRKLLTGELLTLASRQQLIDWMEADKVAGPLLRSALPAGW FIADKSGAGERGSRGIIAALGPDGKPSRIVVIYTTGSQATMDERNRQIAE IGASLIKHWDKSHPETLVKVKDAEDQLGARVGYIELDLNSGKILESFRPE ERFPMMSTFKVLLCGAVLSRVDAGQEQLGRRIHYSQNDLVEYSPVTEKHL TDGMTVRELCSAAITMSDNTAANLLLTTIGGPKELTAFLHNMGDHVTRLD RWEPELNEAAATMENAQKGEIMPNIPQMSAFWYAVRTAVINAASGRQTVD EALKDAQTRITK Sucrose Switch 1-59: Nucleic Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 56) atgaaaataaaaacaggtgcacgcatcctcgcattatccgcattaacgacgatgatgttttccgcctcggctctcgccaaaat cgaagaaggtaaactggtaatctggattaacggcaaggagggctataacggtctcgctgaagtcggtaagaaattcgaga aagataccggaattaaagtcaccgttgagcatccggataaactggaagagaaattcccacaggttgcggcaactggcgat ggccctgacattatcttctatgcacacgaccgctttggtggctacgctcaatctggcctgttggctgaaatcaccccggacaa agcgttccaggacaagctgtatccgtttacctgggatgccgtacgttacaacggcaagctgattgcttacccgatcgctgttc gggcgttatcgctgatttataacaaagatctgctgccgaacccgccaaaaacctgggaagagatcccggcgctggataaa gaactgaaagcgaaaggtaagagcgcgctgatgttcaacctgcaagaaccgtacttcacctggccgctgattgctgctgac gggggttatgcgttcaagtatgaaaacggcaagtacgacattaaagacgtgggcgtggataacgctggcgcgaaagcgg gtctgaccttcctggttgacctgattaaaaacaaacacatgaatgcagacaccgattactccatcgcagaagctgcctttaata aaggcgaaacagcgatgaccatcaacggcccgtgggcatggtccaacatcgacaccagcaaagtgaattatggtgtaac ggtactgccgaccttcaagggtcaaccatccaaaccgttcgttggcgtgctgagcgcaggtattaacgccgccagtccgaa caaagagctggcgaaagagttcctcgaaaactatctgctgactgatgaaggtctggaagcggttaataaagacaaaccgct gggtgccgtagcgctgaagtcttacgaggaagagttggcgaaagatccacgtGCCATACCAAACGACGA GCGTGACACCACGATGCCTGCAGCAATGGCAACAACGTTGCGCAAACTAT TAACTGGCGAACTACTTACTCTAGCTTCCCGGCAACAATTAATAGACTGG ATGGAGGCGGATAAAGTTGCAGGACCACTTCTGCGCTCGGCCCTTCCGGC TGGCTGGTTTATTGCTGATAAATCTGGAGCCGGTGAGCGTGGGTCTCGCG GTATCATTGCAGCACTGGGGCCAGATGGTAAGCCCTCCCGTATCGTAGTT ATCTACACGACGGGGAGTCAGGCAACTATGGATGAACGAAATAGACAGA TCGCTGAGATAGGTGCCTCACTGATTAAGCATTGGGACAAGAGCCACCCA GAAACGCTGGTGAAAGTAAAAGATGCTGAAGATCAGTTGGGTGCACGAG TGGGTTACATCGAACTGGATCTCAACAGCGGTAAGATCCTTGAGAGTTTTC GCCCCGAAGAACGTTTTCCAATGATGAGCACTTTTAAAGTTCTGCTATGTG GCGCGGTATTATCCCGTGTTGACGCCGGGCAAGAGCAACTCGGTCGCCGC ATACACTATTCTCAGAATGACTTGGTTGAGTACTCACCAGTCACAGAAAA GCATCTTACGGATGGCATGACAGTAAGAGAATTATGCAGTGCTGCCATAA CCATGAGTGATAACACTGCGGCCAACTTACTTCTGACAACGATCGGAGGA CCGAAGGAGCTAACCGCTTTTTTGCACAACATGGGGGATCATGTAACTCG CCTTGATCGTTGGGAACCGGAACTGAATGAAGCCgccgccaccatggaaaacgcccaga aaggtgaaatcatgccgaacatcccgcagatgtccgctttctggtatgccgtgcgtactgcggtgatcaacgccgccagcg gtcgtcagactgtcgatgaagccctgaaagacgcgcagactcgtatcaccaagtaa Amino Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 57) MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAKIEEGKLVIWINGKEGYNGLAEVG KKFEKDTGIKVTVEHPDKLEEKFPQVAATGDGPDIIFYAHDRFGGYAQSG LLAEITPDKAFQDKLYPFTWDAVRYNGKLIAYPIAVRALSLIYNKDLLPN PPKTWEEIPALDKELKAKGKSALMFNLQEPYFTWPLIAADGGYAFKYENG KYDIKDVGVDNAGAKAGLTFLVDLIKNKHMNADTDYSIAEAAFNKGETAM TINGPWAWSNIDTSKVNYGVTVLPTFKGQPSKPFVGVLSAGINAASPNKE LAKEFLENYLLTDEGLEAVNKDKPLGAVALKSYEEELAKDPRAIPNDERD TTMPAAMATTLRKLLTGELLTLASRQQLIDWMEADKVAGPLLRSALPAGW FIADKSGAGERGSRGIIAALGPDGKPSRIVVIYTTGSQATMDERNRQIAE IGASLIKHWDKSHPETLVKVKDAEDQLGARVGYIELDLNSGKILESFRPE ERFPMMSTFKVLLCGAVLSRVDAGQEQLGRRIHYSQNDLVEYSPVTEKHL TDGMTVRELCSAAITMSDNTAANLLLTTIGGPKELTAFLHNMGDHVTRLD RWEPELNEAAATMENAQKGEIMPNIPQMSAFWYAVRTAVINAASGRQTVD EALKDAQTRITK Sucrose Switch 1-68: Nucleic Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 58) atgaaaataaaaacaggtgcacgcatcctcgcattatccgcattaacgacgatgatgttttccgcctcggctctcgccaaaat cgaagaaggtaaactggtaatctggattaacggcttggagggctataacggtctcgctgaagtcggtaagaaattcgagaa agataccggaattaaagtcaccgttgagcatccggataaactggaagagaaattcccacaggttgcggcaactggcgatg gccctgacattatcttctatgcacacgaccgctttggtggctacgctcaatctggcctgttggctgaaatcaccccggacaaa gcgttccaggacaagctgtatccgtttacctgggatgccgtacgttacaacggcaagctgattgcttacccgatcgctgttcg tgcgttatcgctgatttataacaaagatctgctgccgaacccgccaaaaacctgggaagagatcccggcgctggataaaga actgaaagcgaaaggtaagagcgcgctgatgttcaacctgcaagaaccgtacttcacctggccgctgattgctgctgacgg gggttatgcgttcaagtatgaaaacggcaagtacgacattaaagacgtgggcgtggataacgctggcgcgaaagcgggtc tgaccttcctggttgacctgattaaaaacaaacacatgaatgcagacaccgattactccatcgcagaagctgcctttaataaa ggcgaaacagcgatgaccatcaacggcccgtgggcatggtccaacatcgacaccagcaaagtgaattatggtgtaacgg tactgccgaccttcaagggtcaaccatccaaaccgttcgttggcgtgctgagcgcaggtattaacgccgccagtccgaaca aagagctggcgaaagagttcctcgaaaactatctgctgactgatgaaggtctggaagcggttaataaagacaaaccgctgg gtgccgtagcgctgaagtcttacgaggaagagttggcgaaagatccacgtGCCATACCAAACGACGAG CGTGACACCACGATGCCTGCAGCAATGGCAACAACGTTGCGCAAACTATT AACTGGCGAACTACTTACTCTAGCTTCCCGGCAACAATTAATAGACTGGA TGGAGGCGGATAAAGTTGCAGGACCACTTCTGCGCTCGGCCCTTCCGGCT GGCTGGTTTATTGCTGATAAATCTGGAGCCGGTGAGCGTGGGTCTCGCGG TATCATTGCAGCACTGGGGCCAGATGGTAAGCCCTCCCGTATCGTAGTTAT CTACACGACGGGGAGTCAGGCAACTATGGATGAACGAAATAGACAGATC GCTGAGATAGGTGCCTCACTGATTAAGCATTGGGACAAGAGCCACCCAGA AACGCTGGTGAAAGTAAAAGATGCTGAAGATCAGTTGGGTGCACGAGTG GGTTACATCGAACTGGATCTCAACAGCGGTAAGATCCTTGAGAGTTTTCG CCCCGAAGAACGTTTTCCAATGATGAGCACTTTTAAAGTTCTGCTATGTGG CGCGGTATTATCCCGTGTTGACGCCGGGCAAGAGCAACTCGGTCGCCGCA TACACTATTCTCAGAATGACTTGGTTGAGTACTCACCAGTCACAGAAAAG CATCTTACGGATGGCATGACAGTAAGAGAATTATGCAGTGCTGCCATAAC CATGAGTGATAACACTGCGGCCAACTTACTTCTGACAACGATCGGAGGAC CGAAGGAGCTAACCGCTTTTTTGCACAACATGGGGGATCATGTAACTCGC CTTGATCGTTGGGAACCGGAACTGAATGAAGCCgccgccaccatggaaaacgcccagaa aggtgaaatcatgccgaacatcccgcagatgtccgctttctggtatgccgtgcgtactgcggtgatcaacgccgccagcgg tcgtcagactgtcgatgaagccctgaaagacgcgcagactcgtatcaccaagtaa Amino Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 59) MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAKIEEGKLVIWINGLEGYNGLAEVG KKFEKDTGIKVTVEHPDKLEEKFPQVAATGDGPDIIFYAHDRFGGYAQSG LLAEITPDKAFQDKLYPFTWDAVRYNGKLIAYPIAVRALSLIYNKDLLPN PPKTWEEIPALDKELKAKGKSALMFNLQEPYFTWPLIAADGGYAFKYENG KYDIKDVGVDNAGAKAGLTFLVDLIKNKHMNADTDYSIAEAAFNKGETAM TINGPWAWSNIDTSKVNYGVTVLPTFKGQPSKPFVGVLSAGINAASPNKE LAKEFLENYLLTDEGLEAVNKDKPLGAVALKSYEEELAKDPRAIPNDERD TTMPAAMATTLRKLLTGELLTLASRQQLIDWMEADKVAGPLLRSALPAGW FIADKSGAGERGSRGIIAALGPDGKPSRIVVIYTTGSQATMDERNRQIAE IGASLIKHWDKSHPETLVKVKDAEDQLGARVGYIELDLNSGKILESFRPE ERFPMMSTFKVLLCGAVLSRVDAGQEQLGRRIHYSQNDLVEYSPVTEKHL TDGMTVRELCSAAITMSDNTAANLLLTTIGGPKELTAFLHNMGDHVTRLD RWEPELNEAAATMENAQKGEIMPNIPQMSAFWYAVRTAVINAASGRQTVD EALKDAQTRITK Switch RG 13: Nucleic Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 60) atgaaaataaaaacaggtgcacgcatcctcgcattatccgcattaacgacgatgatgttttccgcctcggctctcgccaaat cgaagaaggtaaactggtaatctggattaacggcgataaaggctataacggtctcgctgaagtcggtaagaaattcgagaa agataccggaattaaagtcaccgttgagcatccggataaactggaagagaaattcccacaggttgcggcaactggcgatg gccctgacattatcttctgggcacacgaccgctttggtggctacgctcaatctggcctgttggctgaaatcaccccggacaa agcgttccaggacaagctgtatccgtttacctgggatgccgtacgttacaacggcaagctgattgcttacccgatcgctgttg aagcgttatcgctgatttataacaaagatctgctgccgaacccgccaaaaacctgggaagagatcccggcgctggataaag aactgaaagcgaaaggtaagagcgcgctgatgttcaacctgcaagaaccgtacttcacctggccgctgattgctgctgacg ggggttatgcgttcaagtatgaaaacggcaagtacgacattaaagacgtgggcgtggataacgctggcgcgaaagcggg tctgaccttcctggttgacctgattaaaaacaaacacatgaatgcagacaccgattactccatcgcagaagctgcctttaataa aggcgaaacagcgatgaccatcaacggcccgtgggcatggtccaacatcgacaccagcaaagtgaattatggtgtaacg gtactgccgaccttcaagggtcaaccatccaaaccgttcgttggcgtgctgagcgcaggtattaacgccgccagtccgaac aaagagctggcgaaagagttcctcgaaaactatctgctgactgatgaaggtctggaagcggttaataaagacaaaccgctg ggtgccgtagcgctgaagtcttacgaggaagagttggcgaaagatccacGCTGGTTTATTGCTGATAA ATCTGGAGCCGGTGAGCGTGGGTCTCGCGGTATCATTGCAGCACTGGGGC CAGATGGTAAGCCCTCCCGTATCGTAGTTATCTACACGACGGGGAGTCAG GCAACTATGGATGAACGAAATAGACAGATCGCTGAGATAGGTGCCTCACT GATTAAGCATTGGGGATCCGGCGGTGGCCACCCAGAAACGCTGGTGAAAG TAAAAGATGCTGAAGATCAGTTGGGTGCACGAGTGGGTTACATCGAACTG GATCTCAACAGCGGTAAGATCCTTGAGAGTTTTCGCCCCGAAGAACGTTTT CCAATGATGAGCACTTTTAAAGTTCTGCTATGTGGCGCGGTATTATCCCGT GTTGACGCCGGGCAAGAGCAACTCGGTCGCCGCATACACTATTCTCAGAA TGACTTGGTTGAGTACTCACCAGTCACAGAAAAGCATCTTACGGATGGCA TGACAGTAAGAGAATTATGCAGTGCTGCCATAACCATGAGTGATAACACT GCGGCCAACTTACTTCTGACAACGATCGGAGGACCGAAGGAGCTAACCGC TTTTTTGCACAACATGGGGGATCATGTAACTCGCCTTGATCGTTGGGAACC GGAGCTGAATGAAGCCATACCAAACGACGAGCGTGACACCACGATGCCT GCAGCAATGGCAACAACGTTGCGCAAACTATTAACTGGCGAACTACTTAC TCTAGCTTCCCGGCAACAATTAATAGACTGGATGGAGGCGGATAAAGTTG CAGGACCACTTCTGCGCTCGGCCCTTCCGGCTGGCTccgccaccatggaaaacgcccag aaaggtgaaatcatgccgaacatcccgcagatgtccgctttctggtatgccgtgcgtactgcggtgatcaacgccgccagc ggtcgtcagactgtcgatgaagccctgaaagacgcgcagactcgtatcaccaagtaa Amino Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 61) MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAKIEEGKLVIWINGDKGYNGLAEVG KKFEKDTGIKVTVEHPDKLEEKFPQVAATGDGPDIIFWAHDRFGGYAQSG LLAEITPDKAFQDKLYPFTWDAVRYNGKLIAYPIAVEALSLIYNKDLLPN PPKTWEEIPALDKELKAKGKSALMFNLQEPYFTWPLIAADGGYAFKYENG KYDIKDVGVDNAGAKAGLTFLVDLIKNKHMNADTDYSIAEAAFNKGETAM TINGPWAWSNIDTSKVNYGVTVLPTFKGQPSKPFVGVLSAGINAASPNKE LAKEFLENYLLTDEGLEAVNKDKPLGAVALKSYEEELAKDPRWFIADKSG AGERGSRGIIAALGPDGKPSRIVVIYTTGSQATMDERNRQIAEIGASLIK HWGSGGGHPETLVKVKDAEDQLGARVGYIELDLNSGKILESFRPEERFPM MSTFKVLLCGAVLSRVDAGQEQLGRRIHYSQNDLVEYSPVTEKHLTDGMT VRELCSAAITMSDNTAANLLLTTIGGPKELTAFLHNMGDHVTRLDRWEPE LNEAIPNDERDTTMPAAMATTLRKLLTGELLTLASRQQLIDWMEADKVAG PLLRSALPAGSATMENAQKGEIMPNIPQMSAFWYAVRTAVINAASGRQTV DEALKDAQTRITK Switch RG13 I329W: Nucleic Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 62) atgaaaataaaaacaggtgcacgcatcctcgcattatccgcattaacgacgatgatgttttccgcctcggctctcgccaaaat cgaagaaggtaaactggtaatctggattaacggcgataaaggctataacggtctcgctgaagtcggtaagaaattcgagaa agataccggaattaaagtcaccgttgagcatccggataaactggaagagaaattcccacaggttgcggcaactggcgatg gccctgacattatcttctgggcacacgaccgctttggtggctacgctcaatctggcctgttggctgaaatcaccccggacaa agcgttccaggacaagctgtatccgtttacctgggatgccgtacgttacaacggcaagctgattgcttacccgatcgctgttg aagcgttatcgctgatttataacaaagatctgctgccgaacccgccaaaaacctgggaagagatcccggcgctggataaag aactgaaagcgaaaggtaagagcgcgctgatgttcaacctgcaagaaccgtacttcacctggccgctgattgctgctgacg ggggttatgcgttcaagtatgaaaacggcaagtacgacattaaagacgtgggcgtggataacgctggcgcgaaagcggg tctgaccttcctggttgacctgattaaaaacaaacacatgaatgcagacaccgattactccatcgcagaagctgcctttaataa aggcgaaacagcgatgaccatcaacggcccgtgggcatggtccaacatcgacaccagcaaagtgaattatggtgtaacg gtactgccgaccttcaagggtcaaccatccaaaccgttcgaggcgtgctgagcgcaggtattaacgccgccagtccgaac aaagagctggcgaaagagttcctcgaaaactatctgctgactgatgaaggtctggaagcggttaataaagacaaaccgctg ggtgccgtagcgctgaagtcttacgaggaagagttggcgaaagatccacGCTGGTTTATTGCTGATAA ATCTGGAGCCGGTGAGCGTGGGTCTCGCGGTATCATTGCAGCACTGGGGC CAGATGGTAAGCCCTCCCGTATCGTAGTTATCTACACGACGGGGAGTCAG GCAACTATGGATGAACGAAATAGACAGATCGCTGAGATAGGTGCCTCACT GATTAAGCATTGGGGATCCGGCGGTGGCCACCCAGAAACGCTGGTGAAAG TAAAAGATGCTGAAGATCAGTTGGGTGCACGAGTGGGTTACATCGAACTG GATCTCAACAGCGGTAAGATCCTTGAGAGTTTTCGCCCCGAAGAACGTTTT CCAATGATGAGCACTTTTAAAGTTCTGCTATGTGGCGCGGTATTATCCCGT GTTGACGCCGGGCAAGAGCAACTCGGTCGCCGCATACACTATTCTCAGAA TGACTTGGTTGAGTACTCACCAGTCACAGAAAAGCATCTTACGGATGGCA TGACAGTAAGAGAATTATGCAGTGCTGCCATAACCATGAGTGATAACACT GCGGCCAACTTACTTCTGACAACGATCGGAGGACCGAAGGAGCTAACCGC TTTTTTGCACAACATGGGGGATCATGTAACTCGCCTTGATCGTTGGGAACC GGAGCTGAATGAAGCCATACCAAACGACGAGCGTGACACCACGATGCCT GCAGCAATGGCAACAACGTTGCGCAAACTATTAACTGGCGAACTACTTAC TCTAGCTTCCCGGCAACAATTAATAGACTGGATGGAGGCGGATAAAGTTG CAGGACCACTTCTGCGCTCGGCCCTTCCGGCTGGCTccgccaccatggaaaacgcccag aaaggtgaaTGGatgccgaacatcccgcagatgtccgctttctggtatgccgtgcgtactgcggtgatcaacgccgcca gcggtcgtcagactgtcgatgaagccctgaaagacgcgcagactcgtatcaccaagtaa Amino Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 63) MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAKIEEGKLVIWINGDKGYNGLAEVG KKFEKDTGIKVTVEHPDKLEEKFPQVAATGDGPDIIFWAHDRFGGYAQSG LLAEITPDKAFQDKLYPFTWDAVRYNGKLIAYPIAVEALSLIYNKDLLPN PPKTWEEIPALDKELKAKGKSALMFNLQEPYFTWPLIAADGGYAFKYENG KYDIKDVGVDNAGAKAGLTFLVDLIKNKHMNADTDYSIAEAAFNKGETAM TINGPWAWSNIDTSKVNYGVTVLPTFKGQPSKPFVGVLSAGINAASPNKE LAKEFLENYLLTDEGLEAVNKDKPLGAVALKSYEEELAKDPRWFIADKSG AGERGSRGIIAALGPDGKPSRIVVIYTTGSQATMDERNRQIAEIGASLIK HWGSGGGHPETLVKVKDAEDQLGARVGYIELDLNSGKILESFRPEERFPM MSTFKVLLCGAVLSRVDAGQEQLGRRIHYSQNDLVEYSPVTEKHLTDGMT VRELCSAAITMSDNTAANLLLTTIGGPKELTAFLHNMGDHVTRLDRWEPE LNEAIPNDERDTTMPAAMATTLRKLLTGELLTLASRQQLIDWMEADKVAG PLLRSALPAGSATMENAQKGEWMPNIPQMSAFWYAVRTAVINAASGRQTV DEALKDAQTRITK Switch RG13 I329W/A96W: Nucleic Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 64) atgaaaataaaaacaggtgcacgcatcctcgcattatccgcattaacgacgatgatgttttccgcctcggctctcgccaaaat cgaagaaggtaaactggtaatctggattaacggcgataaaggctataacggtctcgctgaagtcggtaagaaattcgagaa agataccggaattaaagtcaccgttgagcatccggataaactggaagagaaattcccacaggttgcggcaactggcgatg gccctgacattatcttctgggcacacgaccgctttggtggctacgctcaatctggcctgttggctgaaatcaccccggacaa agcgttccaggacaagctgtatccgtttacctgggatTGGgtacgttacaacggcaagctgattgcttacccgatcgctgtt gaagcgttatcgctgatttataacaaagatctgctgccgaacccgccaaaaacctgggaagagatcccggcgctggataaa gaactgaaagcgaaaggtaagagcgcgctgatgttcaacctgcaagaaccgtacttcacctggccgctgattgctgctgac gggggttatgcgttcaagtatgaaaacggcaagtacgacattaaagacgtgggcgtggataacgctggcgcgaaagcgg gtctgaccttcctggttgacctgattaaaaacaaacacatgaatgcagacaccgattactccatcgcagaagctgcctttaata aaggcgaaacagcgatgaccatcaacggcccgtgggcatggtccaacatcgacaccagcaaagtgaattatggtgtaac ggtactgccgaccttcaagggtcaaccatccaaaccgttcgttggcgtgctgagcgcaggtattaacgccgccagtccgaa caaagagctggcgaaagagttcctcgaaaactatctgctgactgatgaaggtctggaagcggttaataaagacaaaccgct gggtgccgtagcgctgaagtcttacgaggaagagttggcgaaagatccacGCTGGTTTATTGCTGATAA ATCTGGAGCCGGTGAGCGTGGGTCTCGCGGTATCATTGCAGCACTGGGGC CAGATGGTAAGCCCTCCCGTATCGTAGTTATCTACACGACGGGGAGTCAG GCAACTATGGATGAACGAAATAGACAGATCGCTGAGATAGGTGCCTCACT GATTAAGCATTGGGGATCCGGCGGTGGCCACCCAGAAACGCTGGTGAAAG TAAAAGATGCTGAAGATCAGTTGGGTGCACGAGTGGGTTACATCGAACTG GATCTCAACAGCGGTAAGATCCTTGAGAGTTTTCGCCCCGAAGAACGTTTT CCAATGATGAGCACTTTTAAAGTTCTGCTATGTGGCGCGGTATTATCCCGT GTTGACGCCGGGCAAGAGCAACTCGGTCGCCGCATACACTATTCTCAGAA TGACTTGGTTGAGTACTCACCAGTCACAGAAAAGCATCTTACGGATGGCA TGACAGTAAGAGAATTATGCAGTGCTGCCATAACCATGAGTGATAACACT GCGGCCAACTTACTTCTGACAACGATCGGAGGACCGAAGGAGCTAACCGC TTTTTTGCACAACATGGGGGATCATGTAACTCGCCTTGATCGTTGGGAACC GGAGCTGAATGAAGCCATACCAAACGACGAGCGTGACACCACGATGCCT GCAGCAATGGCAACAACGTTGCGCAAACTATTAACTGGCGAACTACTTAC TCTAGCTTCCCGGCAACAATTAATAGACTGGATGGAGGCGGATAAAGTTG CAGGACCACTTCTGCGCTCGGCCCTTCCGGCTGGCTccgccaccatggaaaacgcccag aaaggtgaaTGGatgccgaacatcccgcagatgtccgctttctggtatgccgtgcgtactgcggtgatcaacgccgcca gcggtcgtcagactgtcgatgaagccctgaaagacgcgcagactcgtatcaccaagtaa Amino Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 65) MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAKIEEGKLVIWINGDKGYNGLAEVG KKFEKDTGIKVTVEHPDKLEEKFPQVAATGDGPDIIFWAHDRFGGYAQSG LLAEITPDKAFQDKLYPFTWDWVRYNGKLIAYPIAVEALSLIYNKDLLPN PPKTWEEIPALDKELKAKGKSALMFNLQEPYFTWPLIAADGGYAFKYENG KYDIKDVGVDNAGAKAGLTFLVDLIKNKHMNADTDYSIAEAAFNKGETAM TINGPWAWSNIDTSKVNYGVTVLPTFKGQPSKPFVGVLSAGINAASPNKE LAKEFLENYLLTDEGLEAVNKDKPLGAVALKSYEEELAKDPRWFIADKSG AGERGSRGIIAALGPDGKPSRIVVIYTTGSQATMDERNRQIAEIGASLIK HWGSGGGHPETLVKVKDAEDQLGARVGYIELDLNSGKILESFRPEERFPM MSTFKVLLCGAVLSRVDAGQEQLGRRIHYSQNDLVEYSPVTEKHLTDGMT VRELCSAAITMSDNTAANLLLTTIGGPKELTAFLHNMGDHVTRLDRWEPE LNEAIPNDERDTTMPAAMATTLRKLLTGELLTLASRQQLIDWMEADKVAG PLLRSALPAGSATMENAQKGEWMPNIPQMSAFWYAVRTAVINAASGRQTV DEALKDAQTRITK Switch IFD7: Nucleic Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 66) atgaaaataaaaacaggtgcacgcatcctcgcattatccgcattaacgacgatgatgttttccgcctcggctctcgccaaaat cgaagaaggtaaactggtaatctggattaacggcgataaaggctataacggtctcgctgaagtcggtaagaaattcgagaa agataccggaattaaagtcaccgttgagcatccggataaactggaagagaaattcccacaggttgcggcaactggcgatg gccctgacattatcttctgggcacacgaccgctttggtggctacgctcaatctggcctgttggctgaaatcaccccggacaa agcgttccaggacaagctgtatccgtttacctgggatgccgtacgttacaacggcaagctgattgcttacccgatcgctgttg aagcgttatcgctgatttataacaaagatctgctgccgaacccgccaaaaacctgggaagagatcccggcgctggataaag aactgaaagcgaaaggtaagagcgcgctgatgttcaacctgcaagaaccgtacttcacctggccgctgattgctgctgacg ggcatcttacggatggcatgacagtaagagaattatgcagtgctgccataaccatgagtgataacactgcggccaacttact tctgacaacgatcggaggaccgaaggagctaaccgcttttttgcacaacatgggggatcatgtaactcgccttgatcgttgg gaaccggaactgaatgaagccataccaaacgacgagcgtgacaccacgatgcctgcagcaatggcaacaacgttgcgc aaactattaactggcgaactacttactctagcttcccggcaacaattaatagactggatggaggcggataaagttgcaggac cacttctgcgctcggcccttccggctggctggtttattgctgataaatctggagccggtgagcgtgggtctcgcggtatcatt gcagcactggggccagatggtaagccctcccgtatcgtagttatctacacgacggggagtcaggcaactatggatgaacg aaatagacagatcgctgagataggtgcctcactgattaagcattgggacaagagccacccagaaacgctggtgaaagtaa aagatgctgaagatcagttgggtgcacgagtgggttacatcgaactggatctcaacagcggtaagatccttgagagttttcg ccccgaagaacgttttccaatgatgagcacttttaaagttctgctatgtggcgcggtattatcccgtgttgacgccgggcaag agcaactcggtcgccgcatacactattctcagaatgacttggttgagtactcaccagtcacagacgggggttatgcgttcaa gtatgaaaacggcaagtacgacattaaagacgtgggcgtggataacgctggcgcgaaagcgggtctgaccttcctggttg acctgattaaaaacaaacacatgaatgcagacaccgattactccatcgcagaagctgcctttaataaaggcgaaacagcga tgaccatcaacggcccgtgggcatggtccaacatcgacaccagcaaagtgaattatggtgtaacggtactgccgaccttca agggtcaaccatccaaaccgttcgttggcgtgctgagcgcaggtattaacgccgccagtccgaacaaagagctggcgaa agagttcctcgaaaactatctgctgactgatgaaggtctggaagcggttaataaagacaaaccgctgggtgccgtagcgct gaagtcttacgaggaagagttggcgaaagatccacgtattgccgccaccatggaaaacgcccagaaaggtgaaatcatgc cgaacatcccgcagatgtccgctttctggtatgccgtgcgtactgcggtgatcaacgccgccagcggtcgtcagactgtcg atgaagccctgaaagacgcgcagactcgtatcaccaagtaa Amino acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 67) MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAKIEEGKLVIWINGDKGYNGLAEVG KKFEKDTGIKVTVEHPDKLEEKFPQVAATGDGPDIIFWAHDRFGGYAQSG LLAEITPDKAFQDKLYPFTWDAVRYNGKLIAYPIAVEALSLIYNKDLLPN PPKTWEEIPALDKELKAKGKSALMFNLQEPYFTWPLIAADGHLTDGMTVR ELCSAAITMSDNTAANLLLTTIGGPKELTAFLHNMGDHVTRLDRWEPELN EAIPNDERDTTMPAAMATTLRKLLTGELLTLASRQQLIDWMEADKVAGPL LRSALPAGWFIADKSGAGERGSRGIIAALGPDGKPSRIVVIYTTGSQATM DERNRQIAEIGASLIKHWDKSHPETLVKVKDAEDQLGARVGYIELDLNSG KILESFRPEERFPMMSTFKVLLCGAVLSRVDAGQEQLGRRIHYSQNDLVE YSPVTDGGYAFKYENGKYDIKDVGVDNAGAKAGLTFLVDLIKNKHMNADT DYSIAEAAFNKGETAMTINGPWAWSNIDTSKVNYGVTVLPTFKGQPSKPF VGVLSAGINAASPNKELAKEFLENYLLTDEGLEAVNKDKPLGAVALKSYE EELAKDPRIAATMENAQKGEIMPNIPQMSAFWYAVRTAVINAASGRQTVD EALKDAQTRITK Switch IFG277: Nucleic Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 68) atgaaaataaaaacaggtgcacgcatcctcgcattatccgcattaacgacgatgatgttttccgcctcggctctcgccaaaat cgaagaaggtaaactggtaatctggattaacggcgataaaggctataacggtctcgctgaagtcggtaagaaattcgagaa agataccggaattaaagtcaccgttgagcatccggataaactggaagagaaattcccacaggttgcggcaactggcgatg gccctgacattatcttctgggcacacgaccgctttggtggctacgctcaatctggcctgttggctgaaatcaccccggacaa agcgttccaggacaagctgtatccgtttacctgggatgccgtacgttacaacggcaagctgattgcttacccgatcgctgttg aagcgttatcgctgatttataacaaagatctgctgccgaacccgccaaaaacctgggaagagatcccggcgctggataaag aactgaaagcgaaaggtaagagcgcgctgatgttcaacctgcaagaaccgtacttcacctggccgctgattgctgctgacg ggcttctgcgctcggcccttccggctggctggtttattgctgataaatctggagccggtgagcgtgggtctcgcggtatcatt gcagcactggggccagatggtaagccctcccgtatcgtagttatctacacgacggggagtcaggcaactatggatgaacg aaatagacagatcgctgagataggtgcctcactgattaagcattggggatccggcggtggccacccagaaacgctggtga aagtaaaagatgctgaagatcagttgggtgcacgagtgggttacatcgaactggatctcaacagcggtaagatccttgaga gttttcgccccgaagaacgttttccaatgatgagcacttttaaagttctgctatgtggcgcggtattatcccgtgttgacgccgg gcaagagcaactcggtcgccgcatacactattctcagaatgacttggttgagtactcaccagtcacagaaaagcatcttacg gatggcatgacagtaagagaattatgcagtgctgccataaccatgagtgataacactgcggccaacttacttctgacaacga tcggaggaccgaaggagctaaccgcttttttgcacaacatgggggatcatgtaactcgccttgatcgttgggaaccggagc tgaatgaagccataccaaacgacgagcgtgacaccacgatgcctgcagcaatggcaacaacgttgcgcaaactattaact ggcgaactacttactctagcttcccggcaacaattaatagactggatggaggcggataaagttgcagacgggggttatgcg ttcaagtatgaaaacggcaagtacgacattaaagacgtgggcgtggataacgctggcgcgaaagcgggtctgaccttcct ggttgacctgattaaaaacaaacacatgaatgcagacaccgattactccatcgcagaagctgcctttaataaaggcgaaaca gcgatgaccatcaacggcccgtgggcatggtccaacatcgacaccagcaaagtgaattatggtgtaacggtactgccgac cttcaagggtcaaccatccaaaccgttcgttggcgtgctgagcgcaggtattaacgccgccagtccgaacaaagagctgg cgaaagagttcctcgaaaactatctgctgactgatgaaggtctggaagcggttaataaagacaaaccgctgggtgccgtag cgctgaagtcttacgaggaagagttggcgaaagatccacgtattgccgccaccatggaaaacgcccagaaaggtgaaatc atgccgaacatcccgcagatgtccgctttctggtatgccgtgcgtactgcggtgatcaacgccgccagcggtcgtcagact gtcgatgaagccctgaaagacgcgcagactcgtatcaccaagtaa Amino Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 69) MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAKIEEGKLVIWINGDKGYNGLAEVG KKFEKDTGIKVTVEHPDKLEEKFPQVAATGDGPDIIFWAHDRFGGYAQSG LLAEITPDKAFQDKLYPFTWDAVRYNGKLIAYPIAVEALSLIYNKDLLPN PPKTWEEIPALDKELKAKGKSALMFNLQEPYFTWPLIAADGLLRSALPAG WFIADKSGAGERGSRGIIAALGPDGKPSRIVVIYTTGSQATMDERNRQIA EIGASLIKHWGSGGGHPETLVKVKDAEDQLGARVGYIELDLNSGKILESF RPEERFPMMSTFKVLLCGAVLSRVDAGQEQLGRRIHYSQNDLVEYSPVTE KHLTDGMTVRELCSAAITMSDNTAANLLLTTIGGPKELTAFLHNMGDHVT RLDRWEPELNEAIPNDERDTTMPAAMATTLRKLLTGELLTLASRQQLIDW MEADKVADGGYAFKYENGKYDIKDVGVDNAGAKAGLTFLVDLIKNKHMN A DTDYSIAEAAFNKGETAMTINGPWAWSNIDTSKVNYGVTVLPTFKGQPSK PFVGVLSAGINAASPNKELAKEFLENYLLTDEGLEAVNKDKPLGAVALKS YEEELAKDPRIAATMENAQKGEIMPNIPQMSAFWYAVRTAVINAASGRQT VDEALKDAQTRITK Switch IFD15: Nucleic Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 70) atgaaaataaaaacaggtgcacgcatcctcgcattatccgcattaacgacgatgatgttttccgcctcggctctcgccaaaat cgaagaaggtaaactggtaatctggattaacggcgataaaggctataacggtctcgctgaagtcggtaagaaattcgagaa agataccggaattaaagtcaccgttgagcatccggataaactggaagagaaattcccacaggttgcggcaactggcgatg gccctgacattatcttctgggcacacgaccgctttggtggctacgctcaatctggcctgttggctgaaatcaccccggacaa agcgttccaggacaagctgtatccgtttacctgggatgccgtacgttacaacggcaagctgattgcttacccgatcgctgttg aagcgttatcgctgatttataacaaagatctgctgccgaacccgccaaaaacctgggaagagatcccggcgctggataaag aactgaaagcgaaaggtaagagcgcgctgatgttcaacctgcaagaaccgtacttcacctggccgctgattgctgctgacg ggaatgaagccataccaaacgacgagcgtgacaccacgatgcctgcagcaatggcaacaacgttgcgcaaactattaact ggcgaactacttactctagcttcccggcaacaattaatagactggatggaggcggataaagttgcaggaccacttctgcgct cggcccttccggctggctggtttattgctgataaatctggagccggtgagcgtgggtctcgcggtatcattgcagcactggg gccagatggtaagccctcccgtatcgtagttatctacacgacggggagtcaggcaactatggatgaacgaaatagacagat cgctgagataggtgcctcactgattaagcattgggacaagagccacccagaaacgctggtgaaagtaaaagatgctgaag atcagttgggtgcacgagtgggttacatcgaactggatctcaacagcggtaagatccttgagagttttcgccccgaagaacg ttttccaatgatgagcacttttaaagttctgctatgtggcgcggtattatcccgtgttgacgccgggcaagagcaactcggtcg ccgcatacactattctcagaatgacttggttgagtactcaccagtcacagaaaagcatcttacggatggcatgacagtaaga gaattatgcagtgctgccataaccatgagtgataacactgcggccaacttacttctgacaacgatcggaggaccgaaggag ctaaccgcttttttgcacaacatgggggatcatgtaactcgccttgatcgttgggaaccggaactgaatgaagccgacgggg gttatgcgttcaagtatgaaaacggcaagtacgacattaaagacgtgggcgtggataacgctggcgcgaaagcgggtctg accttcctggttgacctgattaaaaacaaacacatgaatgcagacaccgattactccatcgcagaagctgcctttaataaagg cgaaacagcgatgaccatcaacggcccgtgggcatggtccaacatcgacaccagcaaagtgaattatggtgtaacggtac tgccgaccttcaagggtcaaccatccaaaccgttcgttggcgtgctgagcgcaggtattaacgccgccagtccgaacaaa gagctggcgaaagagttcctcgaaaactatctgctgactgatgaaggtctggaagcggttaataaagacaaaccgctgggt gccgtagcgctgaagtcttacgaggaagagttggcgaaagatccacgtattgccgccaccatggaaaacgcccagaaag gtgaaatcatgccgaacatcccgcagatgtccgctttctggtatgccgtgcgtactgcggtgatcaacgccgccagcggtc gtcagactgtcgatgaagccctgaaagacgcgcagactcgtatcaccaagtaa Amino Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 71) MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAKIEEGKLVIWINGDKGYNGLAEVG KKFEKDTGIKVTVEHPDKLEEKFPQVAATGDGPDIIFWAHDRFGGYAQSG LLAEITPDKAFQDKLYPFTWDAVRYNGKLIAYPIAVEALSLIYNKDLLPN PPKTWEEIPALDKELKAKGKSALMFNLQEPYFTWPLIAADGNEAIPNDER DTTMPAAMATTLRKLLTGELLTLASRQQLIDWMEADKVAGPLLRSALPAG WFIADKSGAGERGSRGIIAALGPDGKPSRIVVIYTTGSQATMDERNRQIA EIGASLIKHWDKSHPETLVKVKDAEDQLGARVGYIELDLNSGKILESFRP EERFPMMSTFKVLLCGAVLSRVDAGQEQLGRRIHYSQNDLVEYSPVTEKH LTDGMTVRELCSAAITMSDNTAANLLLTTIGGPKELTAFLHNMGDHVTRL DRWEPELNEADGGYAFKYENGKYDIKDVGVDNAGAKAGLTFLVDLIKNKH MNADTDYSIAEAAFNKGETAMTINGPWAWSNIDTSKVNYGVTVLPTFKGQ PSKPFVGVLSAGINAASPNKELAKEFLENYLLTDEGLEAVNKDKPLGAVA LKSYEEELAKDPRIAATMENAQKGEIMPNIPQMSAFWYAVRTAVINAASG RQTVDEALKDAQTRITK Switch EEG251: Nucleic Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 72) atgaaaataaaaacaggtgcacgcatcctcgcattatccgcattaacgacgatgatgttttccgcctcggctctcgccaaaat cgaagaaggtaaactggtaatctggattaacggcgataaaggctataacggtctcgctgaagtcggtaagaaattcgagaa agataccggaattaaagtcaccgttgagcatccggataaactggaagagaaattcccacaggttgcggcaactggcgatg gccctgacattatcttctgggcacacgaccgctttggtggctacgctcaatctggcctgttggctgaaatcaccccggacaa agcgttccaggacaagctgtatccgtttacctgggatgccgtacgttacaacggcaagctgattgcttacccgatcgctgttg aagcgttatcgctgatttataacaaagatctgctgccgaacccgccaaaaacctgggaagagatcccggcgctggataaag aactgaaagcgaaaggtaagagcgcgctgatgttcaacctgcaagaaccgtacttcacctggccgctgattgctgctgacg ggggttatgcgttcaagtatgaaaacggcaagtacgacattaaagacgtgggcgtggataacgctggcgcgaaagcggg tctgaccttcctggttgacctgattaaaaacaaacacatgaatgcagacaccgattactccatcgcagaagctgcctttaataa aggcgaaacagcgatgaccatcaacggcccgtgggcatggtccaacatcgacaccagcaaagtgaattatggtgtaacg gtactgccgaccttcaagggtcaaccatccaaaccgttcgttggcgtgctgagcgcaggtattaacgccgccagtccgaac aaagagctggcgaaagagttcctcgaaaactatctgctgactgatgaaggtctggaagcggttaataaagacaaaccgctg ggtgccgtagcgctgaagtcttacgaggaagagttggcgaaagatccacgtattgccgccaccatggaaaacgcccaga aaggtgaaatcatgccgaacatcccgcagatgtccgctttctggtatgccgtgcgtactgcggtgatcaacgccgccagcg gtcgtcagactgtcgatgaagccctgaaagacgcgcagactcgtatcaccaagggcatgacagtaagagaattatgcagt gctgccataaccatgagtgataacactgcggccaacttacttctgacaacgatcggaggaccgaaggagctaaccgcttttt tgcacaacatgggggatcatgtaactcgccttgatcgttgggaaccggagctgaatgaagccataccaaacgacgagcgt gacaccacgatgcctgcagcaatggcaacaacgttgcgcaaactattaactggcgaactacttactctagcttcccggcaa caattaatagactggatggaggcggataaagttgcaggaccacttctgcgctcggcccttccggctggctggtttattgctga taaatctggagccggtgagcgtgggtctcgcggtatcattgcagcactggggccagatggtaagccctcccgtatcgtagtt atctacacgacggggagtcaggcaactatggatgaacgaaatagacagatcgctgagataggtgcctcactgattaagcat tggggatccggcggtggccacccagaaacgctggtgaaagtaaaagatgctgaagatcagttgggtgcacgagtgggtt acatcgaactggatctcaacagcggtaagatccttgagagttttcgccccgaagaacgttttccaatgatgagcacttttaaa gttctgctatgtggcgcggtattatcccgtgttgacgccgggcaagagcaactcggtcgccgcatacactattctcagaatg acttggagagtactcaccagtcacagaaaagcatcttacggatggcaagtga Amino Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 73) MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAKIEEGKLVIWINGDKGYNGLAEVG KKFEKDTGIKVTVEHPDKLEEKFPQVAATGDGPDIIFWAHDRFGGYAQSG LLAEITPDKAFQDKLYPFTWDAVRYNGKLIAYPIAVEALSLIYNKDLLPN PPKTWEEIPALDKELKAKGKSALMFNLQEPYFTWPLIAADGGYAFKYENG KYDIKDVGVDNAGAKAGLTFLVDLIKNKHMNADTDYSIAEAAFNKGETAM TINGPWAWSNIDTSKVNYGVTVLPTFKGQPSKPFVGVLSAGINAASPNKE LAKEFLENYLLTDEGLEAVNKDKPLGAVALKSYEEELAKDPRIAATMENA QKGEIMPNIPQMSAFWYAVRTAVINAASGRQTVDEALKDAQTRITKGMTV RELCSAAITMSDNTAANLLLTTIGGPKELTAFLHNMGDHVTRLDRWEPEL NEAIPNDERDTTMPAAMATTLRKLLTGELLTLASRQQLIDWMEADKVAGP LLRSALPAGWFIADKSGAGERGSRGIIAALGPDGKPSRIVVIYTTGSQAT MDERNRQIAEIGASLIKHWGSGGGHPETLVKVKDAEDQLGARVGYIELDL NSGKILESFRPEERFPMMSTFKVLLCGAVLSRVDAGQEQLGRRIHYSQND LVEYSPVTEKHLTDGK Switch EEG530: Nucleic Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 74) atgaaaataaaaacaggtgcacgcatcctcgcattatccgcattaacgacgatgatgttttccgcctcggctctcgccaaaat cgaagaaggtaaactggtaatctggattaacggcgataaaggctataacggtctcgctgaagtcggtaagaaattcgagaa agataccggaattaaagtcaccgttgagcatccggataaactggaagagaaattcccacaggttgcggcaactggcgatg gccctgacattatcttctgggcacacgaccgctttggtggctacgctcaatctggcctgttggctgaaatcaccccggacaa agcgttccaggacaagctgtatccgtttacctgggatgccgtacgttacaacggcaagctgattgcttacccgatcgctgttg aagcgttatcgctgatttataacaaagatctgctgccgaacccgccaaaaacctgggaagagatcccggcgctggataaag aactgaaagcgaaaggtaagagcgcgctgatgttcaacctgcaagaaccgtacttcacctggccgctgattgctgctgacg ggggttatgcgttcaagtatgaaaacggcaagtacgacattaaagacgtgggcgtggataacgctggcgcgaaagcggg tctgaccttcctggttgacctgattaaaaacaaacacatgaatgcagacaccgattactccatcgcagaagctgcctttaataa aggcgaaacagcgatgaccatcaacggcccgtgggcatggtccaacatcgacaccagcaaagtgaattatggtgtaacg gtactgccgaccttcaagggtcaaccatccaaaccgttcgttggcgtgctgagcgcaggtattaacgccgccagtccgaac aaagagctggcgaaagagttcctcgaaaactatctgctgactgatgaaggtctggaagcggttaataaagacaaaccgctg ggtgccgtagcgctgaagtcttacgaggaagagttggcgaaagatccacgtattgccgccaccatggaaaacgcccaga aaggtgaaatcatgccgaacatcccgcagatgtccgctttctggtatgccgtgcgtactgcggtgatcaacgccgccagcg gtcgtcagactgtcgatgaagccctgaaagacgcgcagactcgtatcaccaagggcatgacagtaagagaattatgcagt gctgccataaccatgagtgataacactgcggccaacttacttctgacaacgatcggaggaccgaaggagctaaccgcttttt tgcacaacatgggggatcatgtaactcgccttgatcgttgggaaccggagctgaatgaagccataccaaacgacgagcgt gacaccacgatgcctgcagcaatggcaacaacgttgcgcaaactattaactggcgaactacttactctagcttcccggcaa caattaatagactggatggaggcggataaagttgcaggaccacttctgcgctcggcccttccggctggctggtttattgctga taaatctggagccggtgagcgtgggtctcgcggtatcattgcagcactggggccagatggtaagccctcccgtatcgtagtt atctacacgacggggagtcaggcaactatggatgaacgaaatagacagatcgctgagataggtgcctcactgattaagcat tggggatccggcggtggccacccagaaacgctggtgaaagtaaaagatgctgaagatcagttgggtgcacgagtgggtt acatcgaactggatctcaacagcggtaagatccttgagagttttcgccccgaagaacgttttccaatgatgagcacttttaaa gttctgctatgtggcgcggtattatcccgtgttgacgccgggcaagagcaactcggtcgccgcatacactattctcagaatg acttggttgagtactcaccagtcacagaaaagcatcttacggaagtgaagagcactagttag Amino Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 75) MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAKIEEGKLVIWINGDKGYNGLAEVG KKFEKDTGIKVTVEHPDKLEEKFPQVAATGDGPDIIFWAHDRFGGYAQSG LLAEITPDKAFQDKLYPFTWDAVRYNGKLIAYPIAVEALSLIYNKDLLPN PPKTWEEIPALDKELKAKGKSALMFNLQEPYFTWPLIAADGGYAFKYENG KYDIKDVGVDNAGAKAGLTFLVDLIKNKHMNADTDYSIAEAAFNKGETAM TINGPWAWSNIDTSKVNYGVTVLPTFKGQPSKPFVGVLSAGINAASPNKE LAKEFLENYLLTDEGLEAVNKDKPLGAVALKSYEEELAKDPRIAATMENA QKGEIMPNIPQMSAFWYAVRTAVINAASGRQTVDEALKDAQTRITKGMTV RELCSAAITMSDNTAANLLLTTIGGPKELTAFLHNMGDHVTRLDRWEPEL NEAIPNDERDTTMPAAMATTLRKLLTGELLTLASRQQLIDWMEADKVAGP LLRSALPAGWFIADKSGAGERGSRGIIAALGPDGKPSRIVVIYTTGSQAT MDERNRQIAEIGASLIKHWGSGGGHPETLVKVKDAEDQLGARVGYIELDL NSGKILESFRPEERFPMMSTFKVLLCGAVLSRVDAGQEQLGRRIHYSQND LVEYSPVTEKHLTEVKSTS

LITERATURE CITED

Reference to the following citations may assist in understanding of the invention.

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Other Embodiments

Variations, modifications, and other implementations of what is described herein will occur to those of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention and the following claims.

All patents, patent applications, and publications referenced herein are incorporated in their entirety herein. 

1. A method for assembling a fusion molecule, comprising: generating a circular permutation of an insertion sequence; and inserting the insertion sequence into an acceptor sequence. 2-15. (canceled)
 16. A method for modulating a cellular activity, comprising: providing a fusion molecule generated according to the method of claim 1 to a cell, wherein a change in state of at least the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence modulates a cellular activity, and wherein the change in state which modulates the cellular activity is coupled to a change in state of the respective other portion of the fusion molecule; and changing the state of the respective other portion of the fusion molecule, thereby modulating the cellular activity.
 17. A method for delivering a bio-effective molecule to a cell, comprising: providing a fusion molecule associated with a bio-effective molecule generated according to the method of claim 1 to the cell, the fusion molecule comprising an insertion sequence and an acceptor sequence, wherein either the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence binds to a cellular marker of a pathological condition and wherein upon binding to the marker, the fusion molecule dissociates from the bio-effective molecule, thereby delivering the molecule to the cell.
 18. A method for delivering a bio-effective molecule intracellularly, comprising: providing a fusion molecule associated with a bio-effective molecule generated according to the method of claim 1 to the cell, the fusion molecule comprising an insertion sequence and an acceptor sequence, wherein either the insertion sequence or acceptor sequence comprises a transport sequence for transporting the fusion molecule intracellularly, and wherein release of the bio-effective molecule from the fusion molecule is coupled to transport of the fusion molecule intracellularly.
 19. The method according to claim 18, wherein either the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence is capable of binding to a biomolecule, and wherein binding of the fusion molecule with the biomolecule localizes the fusion molecule comprising the bio-effective molecule intracellularly and disassociates the bio-effective molecule from the fusion molecule.
 20. A method for modulating a molecular pathway in a cell, comprising: providing a fusion molecule generated according to the method of claim 1 to the cell, the fusion molecule comprising an insertion sequence and an acceptor sequence, wherein the activity of the insertion sequence and acceptor sequence are coupled, and responsive to a signal, and wherein the activity of either the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence modulates the activity or expression of a molecular pathway molecule in the cell; and exposing the fusion molecule to the signal.
 21. A method for controlling the activity of a nucleic acid regulatory sequence, comprising: providing a fusion molecule generated according to the method of claim 1, the fusion molecule comprising an insertion sequence and an acceptor sequence, wherein either the insertion sequence or the acceptor sequence responds to a signal, and wherein the respective other sequence of the fusion molecule binds to the nucleic acid regulatory sequence when the signal is responded to; and exposing the fusion molecule to the signal. 22-49. (canceled) 